Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 294, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1923 — Page 6
6
OLD - FASHIONED SCHOOL DOOMED Consolidated Institutions Replace Little Red House. Ku Times Special WASHINGTON, April 19.—The little red school house back in the country—you remember the one with the old church bell in the rickety frame cupola on the shingled roof—may soon be a goner. Contending that the city and the country are dependent upon each other, the United States Chamber of Commerce here has begun a nationwide movement for consolidated runt! schools, serving the community for miles around by means of motor busses. These modem structures could afford to be as up to date as any city school, as they would provide for a larger attendance. Experience where such consolidated schools are already established has and. monunstrated that it is no longer necessary for parents to move to the city in order to properly educate their children. COCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS m RjJ. W. J. TORRANCE of W/l KvacsviUo. State president of the Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs,, presided at a meeting of the executive board In Rarior F of the Claypool this morning. Mrs. Frank J. Sheehan of Gary and Mrs. Harret D. Hinkle of Vincennes, first vice president, were present. * * THERE will be a reception this evening on the mezzanine floor of the Hotel Sever!n in honor of the officers of the Indiana Federation of Women's Clubs, who will N> in town for the conference of the Sec emit District Friday at the Seven n In the receiving line will be Mrs. \v •T. Torram-e, Mrs. John Downing Job! son, chairman of the Seventh Dfstrlet; Mrs. Herret D. Hinkle and .Mrs K. ’ Alexander. A musical program wiii be given by Miss Frieda Helder, Miss Semico Reagan ;uid Mrs. It. E. Cran ken. Mrs. Brandt C. Downey's Child Study Class of the Central Avenue M. E. Church will hold its monthly social meeting at 2:3® o'clock Friday afternoon with Mrs. •"harles C Puckett of Broadway as hostess. Mrs. Martha J. Stubbs, lecturer on child psychology will be the spe 'ter. Mrs. Frink Seay will give a re ling The assistant hostesses will bo Mrs. Frank law, Mrs. James Post and Mrs. C. H. King. The monthly me ting of the Altrusa Club will l>< held Friday evening fol lowing a dinner at the Hotel Lincoln. The proposed new const: - ltlon is to be voted on at this me*-ting. Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown will be the speaker at the luncheon Saturday noon at the Lincoln.
Miss Mary Evelyn Riley will entertain at her home on X. Gupitol Ave. with ten table* of bridge Saturday afternoon tn honor of Miss Helen Spahr, a bride-ele-rt- Mias Gertrude Dithmer will give a dinner bridge Monday evening: in honor of Miss Spain and Miss Eleanor Cox. Saturday afternoon, April 2? Miss Dorothea Reisner will give a miscellaneous shower for Miss Spahr. mm# Mrs. J. .T. ('lair. vioe president of the Founder's chapter of the American War Mothers. I.* visiting the home of her daughter in New Tort City. • t Misses Cecil Frye r,d f the Pringle entertained last night at tho home of Miss Pringle on X. Wullac> Ate. so Mrs. Merrikan, formerly Miss Peg Miller The table was decorated wi'h baskets of tea roses and roses tied with pink and blue tulle were the favors. Covers were laid for Mrs. Mrrtkun. Miss Beryl Clark. Muss Estell Cartwright. Mis* Ruth Miller, Miss Velda Shobe. Miss Mildr- and Miller, Miss Mary- Milliner Miss Julia Miler. Mrs. Ted Campbell and Mr*. 1 k^-1 ton. • • • A banquet for th & Rev. ±nd Mrs. Vldebeck. Highland. lowa, was given by the Danish Ladies' Aid Society, at Hamilton Hall Tuesday right. * • • Mrs. Walter S. Greenough. State president r.f the League of Women Voters. Is in Lafayette at the invitation of the Tippecanoe County League, to act as an instructor !n the school of citizenship being conducted by Purdue University. Mr=. Jacob P. Dunn was re-elected president of the Woman’s Home and Foreign Missionary Societies of the Indianapolis Presbytery at a meeting at Franklin Wednesday.
Household Suggestions
Old Straw Hat If your last year’s black straw hat looks a litle rusty, place a piece of butter on an old piece of velvet and ■uflgEjLrub the hat. When the butter has been on a half an hour or so. rub dry and polish with a piece of dry velvet. To Clean Walls Here la an excellent cleaner for painted walls: Dissolve two ounces of borax in two quarts of water, add a teaspoon of ammonia and use about half this amount to each pail of water. You will need no soap. Cooking Cabbage Before cooking cabbage or cauliflower, place them for a while In a bowl of cold water with a generous lvtping of sail.
Americas Candy Queen Gives You Her' Recipes
By ROY GIBBONS V EA Service Staff Writer CHICAGO, April 19.—Today's best news! Mrs. Ora Snyder has agreed to supply a score of recipes for "Mrs. Snyder's Home-Made Candies’’ to readers of The Indianapolis Times. AH America knows about Mrs. Snyder—the women who planted a nickel in a candy garden and made a million dollars grow from it, all within thirteen years. Mrs. Snyder makes and sells candy. "I can't make ail the candy In the world, so 1 just make the best of it," is her copyrighted slogan. The recipes that she is writing for The Times readers are among those that have made her fortune. But she is selecting simple ones, so that, the amateur candy cook will be as sure as possible of success. Each of these recipes, before publication, Is being tried out by a Chicago bride who's just learning to cook. Unless she succeeds with it, Mrs Snyder will not publish it. /‘America's Candy Queen" is the title that has been given Mrs. Snyder. The story of her success proves that it often is darkest just before the dawn. Her husband was desperately sick with typhoid fever. They were down to th**ir last nickel. Mrs. Snyder invested this in sugar and made some candy which she sol i to school children. This bit of enterprise was the seed from which her system of stores in Chicago has grown—a system so highly regarded that only recently she was offered $1,000,004 for her trade name alone. She declined the offer. "I love the business,” she says. "The pleasure t derive from it means so much more to me than money." “Cleanliness" is her business creed. So highly does site prize cleanliness that, as an example, she hires a
Learn to Dance in Six Lessons! NO. 2—HARVARD TAPS \ ;.rj r; if * ’ ARTHUR MURRAY AND DANCING PARTNER ILLUSTRATE \ MOVEMENT IN "HARVARD TAPS" FOEI/TW THE DIAGRAM IN LEARNING THIS DANCE.
tn VRTHI'U Ml’KltA V j Dirt* tor. National Institute of Social Dancing. , (Copyright, 152:i, XKA Service, lnc.i IF you are one of the dancers who simply walk a girl around the i room while whispering “sweet j nothings"’ the Harvard taps won t suit you at all in this new fox trot the dancer* must give their entire at- , tention to their feet. The steps are different from most 1 other fox trot variations and at first ! may seem difficult. But for whatever trouble you go to in learning this'dance, you will be repaid many ! times when you learn its interesting variations. Os course, you know that every one ; wants to dance with the person who • knows the very latest steps, and the good dancer often has many opportunities of meeting the right kind of people who may help him in business and in social life. THE HART \I{D T\PS Combination No. 1 M AX'S PART: Take a long slow walking step straight forward with the left foot n> and tap (2) the right ! foot lightly at your right side: immediately after the tap, quickly ex . tend the right foot in front as in the photograph. Then step forward with your right ; foot (3) and with your left foot (4 : tap at your life side and then quickly extend the left foot in front. ReI member that the tap is a very light one and that only the tips of your toes touch the floor. Practice the above about thirty minutes or until you can walk with a free, easy swing'. Remember that while you step forward with one foot, the other foot, takes a light tap and is ! quickly swung In front. LADY’S PART: | 1 Step backward with tho right foot, at the same time tan with the lefi foot at your left and quickly extend it backward as in illustration, j 2. Step backward on left foot, tap with right foot and quickly extend the i right foot backward. Combination No. 2 | MAN'S PART: t, Take a kng slow step straight
MRS. ORA SNYDER, “AMERICA'S CANDY QI KEN,” WHO HAT MADE A MILLION DOLLARS OUT OF HOMEMADE CANDY IN THIRTEEN YEARS.
j manicurist to do nothing but look i after the fingernails of her candymak- ] era. She employes 400 persons and
forward with the left foot. While the weight is on the left foot, tap th*- right foot lightly at your right. While you tii.ik* tie* tap with tin* right incline your body slightlv sidewise to the left '? Tak** a long slow step straight forward with the right foot, weight on right. That's all. Repeat thk entire step of two counts. Uaiioe In as carefree a maimer as possible. it* member that the tap is done by lightly placing only the tips of the toes to tho floor. It. is a quick movement with one foot while the weight is on the other foot. RADY'S PART: 1. Take a. long slow step straight backward with right foot and tap tiie left foot at your left side. 2 With left foot, take a long slow step straight backward, weight on left. That's all. Repeat Jhe entire step. NEXT: The Debutante Waltz PROPER LINE The circular skirt, of tho moment has all the fullness pulled up in tlie front and is very straight and plain In tho back.
What to Eat and Why Making a Big Word an Easy Par! of Your Diet
Car-bo-hy-drates make up about tiO per cent of the average diet. They produce heat and energy. They are largely secured from the grain and vegetable starches. In the long, slow baking by which Grape-Nuts is produced from wheat and malted barley, the grain starches are partially predigested. They are changed to “dextrlns" and "maltose” —forms of Carbohydrates so easy to digest that they form the basis of the most successful baby foods. Many people have digestive trouble caused by the food-starch in its original form, but Grape-Nuts has been famous for a quarter-century for its
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
"Good cheer" is the slogan of her establishments The first recipe will lie printed tomorrow.
Martha Lee's Advice Young Woman Finds Men of Today ‘Disgusting’ The girls 0 f today came ;n for some severe eritieism in loiters received by me several months ago. Today it is the men who are "knocked. Strangely enough. file most severe . ritiei.sm git n them in a lett.-i 1 hate just ive.i is that they never are mie pals, but talk of nothing Imt how much they love the gir! they are with. Perhaps the criticism is jusi, in many eases. Put whose fault is il Are the men not capable of carrying on an intelligenl eon
Vci-'-a <ir and and they :;ct the irn pt sion. from must girls, that they 1 warn in.tiling el.-c. aid tai:e R for g i anted that that is true of all girls?; Hr. imt' they too ia.zy <> oxert them-j reives n,e;e v, win .. (ley can make' then .el >1 popul r Without fiuea cX onion' Vi:ti if that :s true, i'li't It ! partly the girls' fault? We <T-..tld go round and round try - ; ing to find the answer. Spring Fever, Perhaps Penp'-nt Msi 1 ,*y- B.irn' h.it [ *ojj f!drr i,in> i t!,e must muter abin auir.an It trull.i i tun wriUu* ,o v >u fer adV ii! SC*. Ills, ;m 1t,,, ift’i It k, it:,;. ,snl! fer ni" to ruu'.i-ut my'i 1 Ulul'Ttakn 1 lii:V'. r tiiitsi: ii. When I irto t.' -d, i dread for (riorum* to ' ••on:.' ! I ivo u !■>., re: liemen friends h: * they * do not inter **t me I-i fact, tie’v bor* m 1 ... < , tat. to tr.em, hit ii,.-pi-el not to and',"Ht :: i! Aii the;, -k • 11. .-A Iliucft tie v • tit-', ter you filer, arn none who .-in.ld play the part of a real pal No. I am lint ill lore Uow foolinh! I am “a and lower loved any one and never j shall. 'ldi" !.h<. ,„-U M*'vi'i niy mind. | t.." unit.- 1 ,un dingtiht.'d With tin re of today My work • -that I have n a,,; bull attir t.,:U. what Miss M VS'i i;ui< >t’S You are dissatisfied. tiot because you are in love, but because you are not lit love. You are self-centered. You should start out to help some one who is worse off than you: That would give you an interest in life And don't, boa. cynic about men You can bunch them and > tli *r."in ail "bad'' or ‘good,’' just as you can do .with women. Or you can be fair and give each one a. chance to prove his individual worth. That Is what you are not doing. Take a fc.v days vacation. You need i. change of atmosphere. Father Disappeared My H> jr Mtsa Leo: I am a follow of IS. j t -iia Iciirnn,.: t ti and" and tri-iiu* only SH a week About two weeks n.:e. my lather ells ! appi'iiwt and left rn.v mother aid tin* r.iUi- : out atiy money We liavr ii crnfoi t able | home ami vet along llrat-rafe. \\ • do not ' know why or whore ho wont. Should wo | notify the police? Should I quit tny trade' ' What should * do? JIMMIE. | Notify the jkjHco immediately Don't: | leave your trade, Jimmie, if you and ( your mother can iwtsfdbly get along, | unless you can get Into something I which will pay more now and vivo J you an equal ehanun of advancement. ! Keep a stiff upper lip and you will i pull through all right Stick to Him .11 'ST A MOTHERLY SWEET HEART: Stick to Buddy. If you want to go with the other hoy onco in a while, all right; but don't giro jup other friends for him. Buddy I stems to he the finer of the two, J although it is hard to judge at .such j long distance. Love in a Cottage Dp.ir Martliii L** 1 ;m i. yon?f in.n : in juil n*ver havo been iußtmtomuil to rod . with r irD But two wir'.; < .. .. i nut * a griii, who really won my h*i.rl !|.r jm: ! ents to not allow hor to havo u.mll* * a <i, n ' 1m still m high school. / am earning
exceptional ease of digestion, and os similation. and its splendid, building j nourishment. It is a food for strength j and energy, delightfully crisp and ap I petizing, made today by tho same for-1 mula which first brought this charm I for taste and aid to health to the world's dining table. Grape-Nuts con j tains the Iron, phosphorus and the ! essential vitamin, so often lacking in j modern, “refined" foods. Many servings of real food value in ; a package of this economical food I At your grocer's today—ready to serve with cream or milk. Grape-Nuts—the Body Builder. “There’s a Reason." Made by Postum Cereal Cos., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich. —Advertisement.
E STOW Os INKEPI^OT^ if ehctioks bstooedih ppivate lettep* \ copyright N23 -nca "service inc ,
BETTER FROM EESEIE I’RES- ( OTT TO EESEIE I‘RFS( OTT (CONTINUED) Bess than a month after manage and Jack and l have come to an impasse from which each of us is turning away in a different direction. It j is too horrible! Jack’s manner of ap- j preaching this understanding, as lie j called it, gave me to understand that he thought I was “the woman who did not care.” He was particularly obstinate and foolish about it, and we were quarreling over a little old letter with probably nothing important In it from a man friend to him. If the letter had been from a worn an. T could sec why he might have made such a fuss about it. Why he must take this little silly thing that I had done in opening ran envelope addressed tn him (I hadn't given read the letter, lie snatched it from* me before I could do soi as a text for wh it to me wa.- going to be an interminable sermon on personal liberty, r could not conceive. i determined to forestii.ll him if I j could. “All right. Jack, if this is to be a j mutual un>, let-standing party, please, let mo state my case first. “From what you have just said, and the nnci'i - which you have shown at nn ini.- understanding in regard to Mli 1 in.in (in:),lei an ur reasonable requirement on your put. I must come to tile conclusion that even though you disclaim all intention of tu ing a despot, you are one." Jack raised his hand in protest,! but ! went on. “I will in the future : grant vour ungraciously implied request that I do not open any letter addressed to you, but I roust in turn! ask that you do not make a spec- j tacle of me before strangers. Tn all tny life I have never been s t, mortt ; fled as ! was this morning when you, so fur., '.sly snatched that letter our of titv hand Surely you must know]
'• ■'■ - ■ l in inv. li-. ,vl ami sii to K-*t aiairPsi bat itut, * ai w wh* ’ i ,-r i- I V,'... in.: pi. tai M to Mi. t .*• 1 VouilS Hope with tills b'S it v. ut 1,,-- par. tw - I fe'ir It 1 *! i-'iM i. t . Kir., ir- I should aimest .a v ::•! .! r p You .in mu want to give up. lm! bow on earth do you < Xpert to K•• •;t ia i on $n ,i w.-'k" Be-id", if you < loji’.’d the mart tag" could be annulled j .is you tire under age. it you r* 1 11;.- i .tr • for tin girl, you ■will wait a few years, until both of jo a are oid enough to think of mar Hugo and yi at ar** able to support a wife, be fa;, vtui speak of marriage Co-Worker Is Annoying o**r Mu* 1 1 tun IP iad work m factory \ n.'it. el ;:u or a works in fr-uit of me b-t 1 ,1(1 i.ot i.-tr, f r titm a, •pt u trie:,! ti., tatrts and winks amt mitfd tit mo till t:." time i toiij turn I .1, not flirt ud usio .1 hau to quit. Hut wlil not (iiid H.iy hr would not. ei wlt ri a anrt that winked ic. lain How CHit I keep hint us ,a frt"nd umt et, : hare hiri quit ifirtinf with me: !!e tola Some- iris ho was !n love with me i would not make a date with hitu be i .no I uni it. ’.me wttii in,'tier fellow Would you to. him awa,n o: taet iet, him keep on until t,, sets tired': Mr ia a nice U ov, and url> 'i.e t-i i,i he.-* a itood tltii" iln !•. not tn:i" A CONSTANT KEADEtt if the nuan iumoys you, simply ig boro him until he tcuii/.es tltat you nn-ant wiiat you said when you told itim to si ip flirting with you. free trial Bottle—Postage Prepaid Cmy ' . People B —learn my story! wel 1 ran t try It In thin small ndvertluement. hq I ask you to sontl JKMtm forth patented Fre© Trial fDBSM rarkago wh! ti contains a trial bottle of my Restorer and full wH explanation and directions for making convincing tent on one ; lock or hair, Whin yoo learn how I perfected my Fe- *J > •torer to bring brick tho cofr to I luy own gray hair, what perfect reunite it liow easy is spnlication, you wi l realize wbftt my offer means to all gray haired people. A?y HahK’olor Restorer ts * clear. liquid, clcnn as water No r.Nairn ens to make your hair stick r and stringy, nothing t< wn horrub- ff. Kcstomienlor perfectly natural in ail lights, Do<!ar.gerof etreakirg crdiscoloration Results just as sat bf actory whnnusea on faded, bleached or e *tr* okish, discolored dyed hair. Mail coupon today for lYceTtfal package and learn my wonderful story and what it means to j('A. If possible, enclose a lock of your bair^^yW^k f •- Tleiweprfrt your name an J address i | M*RY T OOUiMAW I j nop Ooldnkß Bid*., flt. rl. Mlaa. * i*!tas send your patented Free Trial Outfit. & J * chows color or hair. Black—riarkbr-own—ra<— J I Jium brown, sulmrn id or krad)... light brown... i | light auburn (light red).,,, blucde..,. * Nam* | I ,Vf*t _. _. . Ctfy ! Decayed Teeth Cause Foul Breath A pus pocket at the root of a tooth with no point of dischargo will infect the entire blood stream and may cause death. Ask your physician ! Some folks fear having a tooth extracted because in the old days It did hurt—that day Is over. “My teeth were always hard to extract, but the People's Dentists removed them without; hurting me a bit."—D. It. Caldwell, Guilford Plats. City. THE PEOPLE’S DENTISTS S6 WEST WASHINGTON ST.
what that smug clerk behind the desk was thinking. The whole action was one of those very things that tiie cartoonists grasp so quickly, and from which they make the little tragedies of married life seem only ridiculous and laughable episodes.” Jack's lips curled derisively, and then and there I learned that what women called the tragedies of martied life and what are the tragedies of married life to men are very different. Even af:er this morning’s quarrel 1 stilPcunnot see why I should be so very particular about letters from Jack’s men friends, and 1 told him so, adding that I would be perfectly satisfied to let him read my letters from Beatrice Grirrishaw, Jack snorted. Yes, he fairly snort-
Venus De Milo Wouldn’t Make Pollies Chorus fiy 1 nit til rre*H CHICAGO, April 19.—Venus de Milo would never have been able t" pass the beauty test of a Broadway chorus girl. "Flo" /,:• gf'-ld. Jr., foremost Vm'-rican ifinin • *>ifi:r ‘J feminine ('harms, declared here today. "Her lips are too broad, her shoulders too slim, her ankles too large and her calves tinproportioned, ’ Ziogfeld, here to visit his father, Gen. Florenz Ziegfeld, said. According to "Flo ’ the perfect beauty now days must have: Well rounded shoulders. A prettily shaped calf. Hmall feet. Small ankles I.pgs must not be hollowed out from the knees up. Ziegfeld said he regarded Avont,r Taylor of the Follies and Mary McDonald, of the "Sally” com pany in Chicago, as the most ideal types of American beauty.
pep&y <Ann a~Shoppin&Gces/ ! hjD/:k/ Springtime lias come; baseball season is opening, plans are ( XY under way for June weddings and the festivities connected with V'/O vSo l/Y'Y “ graduation. i Never does one fel the necessity of new raiment more titan j-A \ "t / in she Spring. Peggy Ann taks a special delight in felling her ji readers about the new offerings of the shops just now as they vY 1 are particularly attractive.
1 here Is Such A la>t of satisfaction in reposing absolute ci't.ff !c::c* :a a person s judga• nt for that reason Peggy Ann i.J;cs especial pleasure in going to Mr. Petri's "Jewel Shop Beautiful," second tloor of the Uuaruntj - ingMi ivtri makes the modernizing of jewelry a special study and is very competent in resetting stones :n a most at tractive way Peggy Ann was delighted with the way this Jeweler mounted a stone for her recently; having it remounted afforded as much pleasure as an entirely new ring Shops are already beginning to in clothes and gifts ee-p-ciallj suitable for June brides and tiie "sweet girl graduate" \ esterdaj l went I'p —to tin* millinery department, fourth floor of the William H. Block Company, to look for anew red hat; I found one, a tiny shape almost like a jockey hat, made of ben ut ;f n! mllan hemp with a tailored grosgraln ribbon bow. This department had a number of other rod hats that were almost equally attractive—that Is just one of the very satisfactory conditions one meets in shopping hero, there is always a big assortment from which to select. This shop specializes In the newest styles, standardized prices and first-class quality. A'on will be happily surprised at the almost unlimited selection from which von can choose a hat that will seem as if it has been designed for yoti especially. These Days Are Full of stress, there is little doubt of that. A tiling one greatly appre Hates is the rest and lowered ten sion that results from listening to the large choir of the Heath Memorial Church beautifully render their religious melodies. You will feel quite repaid by a visit to this church. * * * Walking sticks and canes will be seen on the local streets with Increasing frequency during the spring and summer season. Summer materials r e appearing In multitudinous colorings and weaves.
PEGGY ANN’S SERVICE! If you are having trouble in finding some desired article, simply call Peggy Ann at The Indianapolis Times Office, and if she does not know where the article can be found, site will gladly look for it. Any and all shopping questions will be authentically answered; direct purchases will be made if desired. Call Main 3600 and ask for Peggy Ann.
ed in anger. "Wa-wa-wait a minute,” he stuttered, “can you not just for a second get away from a concrete action which is comparatively meaningless and look upon th principle behind the thing?" 1 don’t know why Jack’s intimation that it was not possible for me to be reasonable made me so ar.gry, but l
Another Royal Suggestion Chocolate Layer Cake From the New ROYAL COOK BOOK
fpHERE are tiiirty- *• two unusual cake recipes in the Chapter on cakes in the New Royal Cook Book! Try this one: Chocolate Layer Cake % cup shortening 1 cup sugar 1 egg 1 cup milk ISi cups flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baiting Pow.ier V teaspoon salt 1 ten spoon van ilia extract Cream shortening: add sugar gradually, beating well; add beaten egg, onehalf the milk and mix well; add one-half the flour which has been sifted with salt and baking powder; add remainder of milk, then remainder of flour and flavoring; beat after each addition. Buko in greased laver cake tins in moderate oven 1& to 20 minutes. Put together with Chocolate Filling and Icing * capo confectioner's sugar boiling water I teaspoon vanilla extract Jounces unsweetened ohoooiate 1 2 squares! 14 teaspoon grated orange pee! To sugar add boiling water very slowly to make a smooth paste; add vanilla. melted chocolate and orange peel. Spread between layers and on top of cake.
\re \on Playing Fair by the youngsters in your family? (>t.,* f the firs; requisites in a prep oriy balanced diet for children is to see that plenty of milk is included, r * lie sure of getting sanitary milk from a Sunlit plant order Polk’s milk. it Is pure and wholesome. Cotton canton crepe with a decorative stitch simulating hemstitching. Is shown for summer wear in all popular shades. '/) , d\obins . The Attractive Cut —bespeaking Spring itself, is the charming new lingerie and hosiery -hop, which has appropriated a cozy niche in Madame Whitney's Corset. Shop. 2S Monument Place This shop Is offering a full line of undies, from simple batiste ones to those fashioned of exquisite scln tiiia crepe; gowns, boudoir and sleeping pajamas, chemises, stepins. bloomers, petticoats and prin-t-ess slips, can be had in modish design and lovely colors. Kaysor sllk, lisle and knit silk under garments. Onyx and "Pointev Heels" hosiery in eMffon. clocked and plain silk can be had in all the newest suit shades. Tho prices are right, the merchandise exclusive and Peggy Ann is very glad to recommend this shop to her readers. pi:|fr The Birds Have Begun —to come back to their Hoosier haunts, and we eagerly look for our favorite of the feathered ttoclc. Just as different as the plumage and songs of the tiny choristers are the reproducing qualities of different phonographs. We enjoy them all in a casual way. but when It comes to tho test of possession we hunt for the one that will bear for us a lasting appeal. Comparable to tho melodious full throated notes of the cardinal's song, are the clear, true tones of the Brunswick phonograph. Visit tite Brunswick department of the Baldwin Piano Company and see their late models—you will And a style that will flt your room anti harmonize with the rest of your furniture.
THURSDAY, AFIUL 19, 1923
was fairly beside myself with r.jge. "You will make me think. John Prescott, that there was something in that letter you did not wish mo to see.” NEXT: The same letter, continued —Married, but as far apart as tho poles.
Hi • - fiL BAKING POWDER Absotsifciy Ruitg Muide from Cream of Tas-tas, derived from grapes.
SEND FOR nr You can use one or more of tho 400 recipe* given In the New Royal Cook Book at every home meai, every day In the week. Write for your copy today. Address ROYAL BAKING POWDER OCX. 115 Y-cJItOO Srtrwi, York City.
There Is Nothing That —helps to start the morning right as much as a cup of good coffee. of poor coffee can do a lot toward ruining a day. 3-F Coffee as put out by the Fishhack Company has a pleasant aroma, unimpaired strength and a palatable flavor, three necessary requisites for an enjoyable cup of coffee Ask your grocer for 3-F coffee and do away with the possibility of coffee that Is unsatisfactory. 111 Accessories, Those Small Details —of ihess that stamp the woman iff refinement and smart appearance are of primary importance. A street costume or afternoon toilette may be lifted from the mediocre by tho right kind of accessories. The Pettis Dry Goods Company is snov- ::g sett * costume Jewelry —A ids neck chains, bracelets and™ earrings, that are the last word in smart jewelry. This department has the largest collection and most varied assortment in town—Egyptian. shower and pendant drops can be had here in all colors and combinations. A silk or beaded bag, another accessory of charm, can be found to match your dress or suit. Peggy Vim urges you to shop at Pettis for accessories. a • * Bright colored striped .and floral linen cretonnes are shown for summer draperies. * * * "1 fjove Me,” “Don’t Think 1 —You’ll Be Missed,” these and a whole host of other new songs can be found at the Ed East Song Shop. 49 N. Illinois St. The new songs can be found here as soon as they are released from the press: the management will gladly demonstrate any song the customer wishes to hear. Drop Into this music shop—you’ll like it. Red will be popular in spring and summer dress accessories. sC&ipi Clnn
—Advertisement.
