Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1923 — Page 7
MONDAY. JULY 9, 1923
Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
MRS. J. D. HOGATE of Danville. Ind., will entertain Wednesday at her home in honor of : her niece. Miss Ruth Ralston, daugh- | ter of Senator and Mrs. Samuel M. j Ralston, Cold Springs road, whose marriage to William Stewart*Laßue will take place July 25. Among the parties planned for Miss Ralston is a luncheon to be given Saturday by Mrs. Harmon Bradshaw at the SpinkArms. • • Miss Margaret Shouse. 3325 N. New Jersey St., has as her house guest Miss Henrietta Cowherd of PineviUe. Ky. • * * Mr. and Mrs Russell King, 3512 Evergreen Ave.. have motored to Newcastle. 0.. and will return this week, leaving immediately for their summer cottage at Lake Wawasee. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Paige and daughter Virginia. 18 E. Thirty-Sec-ond St., have motored to South Haven. Mich. * * • A party consisting of Mr. and Mrs. R E. Steele, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Raustenburg. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Teery. Mr. and Mrs. David Spake, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roberts. Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Smith and Miss Katherine Smith motored to the Shades of Death Sunday. • • • Mrs. Ellen Curran. 734 Dorman Ave., announces the marriage of her daughter. Anna, to William E. Neu of Decatur. 111., Thursday morning at St. Joseph's rectory. The Rev. F. B. Dowd officiated. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Mary Curran; the groom, by Adolph Fritz. Mr. and Mrs. Neu left after the wedding breakfast, which followed the ceremony, for Decatur, 111., where they will make their home. • • * The Ladies' Aid of the Moravian Episcopal Church will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. John Weghorst, 1725 S. State Ave. * * * A garden card party will be given Wednesday afternoon by the Indianapolis Turners at Turner Park. In the evening there will be dancing in the pavilion. Mrs. William Keppeler has charge. • * • Cedars of Lebanon will hold their regular meeting Friday in the form of an all-day picnic at Brookside Park. • • • Mrs J. E. Barcus of the American Legion Auxiliary, with Mrs. Grover Workman, State secretary, will go to New Palestine Tuesday to speak before the legion auxiliary there. Mrs. Workman and Mrs Barcus. accompanied by Mr*. I. N. Downey of Wabash. Ind.. wall attend the Sixth District joint convention of the American Legion and Auxiliary at Richmond. Thursday. Mrs. Barcus will speak.
Mr. and Mrs. Alden H. Adams, Fifty-Third St. and Keystone Ave., will leave late this month for a trip to Yellowstone Park. t • • Mr. and Mrs. U. G. Baker. 2050 X. Meridian St., will have as their guests this week Mr. and Mrs. Fred G. Ruthrauff of Los Angeles, Cal. Mr. Ruthrauff. brother of Mrs. Baker, will sail the last of the month for Paris, where he will study art for a year. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bieler. 3146 N Delaware St., are tnotoring in the East. They will spend several weeks in Philadelphia. • • • Mr. and Mrs. George F. Bass. 3353 ' Broadway, will have their daughter, Mrs. Helen Bass Keller of Los Angeles. Cal., as their guest for several weeks this summer. • • George Mayer and Misses Mabelle and Myrtle Myer, 2030 X. Alabama St., returned today from a motor trip to Dayton and Chillicothe. Ohio. • • • Alvin P. Hovey W. R. C., Xo. 196, will meet in the future on the second and fourth Fridays of the month at the G. A. R. Hall. * * * Announcement of the engagement *-of Miss Margaret Zearing of Madison, Ind., to Dr. John F. Cunningham of Indianapolis, was made at a dinner given by Dr. and Mrs. F. E. Taylor Friday evening at the Indianapolis Country Club. * * • The Duo-Art fraternity will hold its annual banquet Friday evening at the Lincoln. The committee on arrangements will be Leslie Bell, president, and Hubert Vitz, general chairman. * * • A pretty garden party and shower was given Friday evening for Miss Pauline Vogel, a bride-elect, at the home of Miss Helen Lentz, 2926 X. Talbott Ave., by Miss Gladys McDonald and Miss Lentz. A color scheme of orchid and jade was used in the decorations and ices. The gifts, in two large baskets trimmed with orchid and green, were presented to Miss Vogel In the garden, which was lighted with Japanese lanterns. The favors were miniature Japanese parasols. The guests Included Misses Ida and Clara Vogel, Mrs. Ernest Ambuhl, Mrs. Pauline Vogel, and Mesdames Guss Alandt, Cleston Berry, Edward Boyd, Robert Bragg, Ernest Cornell, Fred Dunnington, R. Falls, Walter Fitch, Mable Heckman, C. S. Hey. Emil Iverson, Paul Koebeler, Albert Lentz. Pearl McDonald. Donald Smith, Edgar West, and Misses Helen Dade, Mary Ann Ftz Simmons, Theone Hayes. Lenore and FYancis Heckman, Mable Kiefer, Gertrude Koers, Virgil Orman. Helen Reardon, Pearl Shockley. Ruth Simms, Esther Unversaw, Beulah WSebke and Florence Warner. Another "Pusher” Race Saturday Having successfully concluded a twelve-lap pushmobile race around the circle on X. Audubon road Saturday night with a victory for his team, Harry Montjoy, promoter, today an nounced that another will be run next Saturday night somewhere near Thirty-Eighth St. and College Ave. Four pushers took turns shoving Donold Riley to victory. He won a pair of roller skates. Three other cars were entered.
Here Are State’s Best Dancers
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MISS MARTHA LONG AND RUDOLPH ELMORE,
If you want to wrest the title of State champion dancers from Miss Martha Long, 547 N. Setfette Ave., and Rudolph Elmore, 721 N. Pershing Ave., you’d better start prac-
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LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CONTINUED There is one thing tor which I have to thank Jack's mother. I do get so much comfort out of you, dear little Marquise, who only beside myself may hold the key to this secret drawer. I wonder how Mrs. Prescott found it in her heart to part with this beautiful desk. Now for a great secret. I have found out that Ruth Ellington's heart has not grown cold. It has merely grown for itself a kind of prickly coccoon, something that will protect its warmth and youth from the knowledge of the world. After w-e had tried on nearly every hat in town and had a'most beautiful time, I invited Ruth—l have begun to call her Ruth by this time — to go with me\ to th‘e smartest tea place in town. Before w-e went in, we both dolled ourselves up a little in the ladies’ dressing room and I knew the same thought came to each of us as we entered. We were quite the best looking women in the room. “Society women, Leslie,” said Ruth, “always look so bored.” I did not have the heart to tell her that the night before I thought she
Cold Meat and Vegetable Salad By BERTHA E. SHAPLEIGH of Columbia University THIS is a good salad to serve as a main luncheon or supper dish. Any cold cooked meat may be used, but chicken is, of course, the best and perhaps lamb comes next. Sometimes one has a piece of lamb left which is not sufficiently large to slice, and yet It is too nice a piece to chop. Cut this into very small, thin slices. For two cups of these pieces add two tablespoons oil and one tablespoon vinegar (that left from mint sauce is excellent). Add also onehalf teaspoon salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper and a little grated or chopped onion. Let this stand in a cold place until serving time. Cut cold boiled potatoes into small cubes and over these put a little French dressing. Cold peas or green string beans and two peeled tomatoes cut into eighths should be treated in the same way. Serve the meat in the center of the platter and surround it with lettuce and the vegetables, alternating the vegetables, having potatoes, then peaß. then tomatoes. Sprinkle all with finely chopped parsley and pass mayonnaise or boiled dressing if desired. M. E. TRUSTEES TO MEET Site of New Children’s Home Will Be Considered. The board of trustees of the Indiana conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church will meet Tuesday to confirm the action of its committee in selecting Mooresville for the new Indiana M. E. children's home. The present home at Greencastle will be used until thenew home is ready. An option on a tract of twen-ty-eight acres has been obtained at Mooresville. Parked Auto Stripped Wilbur Grant, 1208 Southeastern Ave., today told police a thief stripped his automobile of two electric headlights, a tail light and a certificate of title, while it was parked at Riverside Park. Jacob Shalansky, 446 E. Washington St., told police a thief took a tire off his car, parked In Market St., near Alabama St.
ticing now, They will defend it Labor day at a place to be selected later. Several couples tried unsuccessfully to beat the champions at JVia chinists' Hall recently.
looked bored to death, for today she was bright and happy and a gay little butterfly floating about the flowers. I could not help wondering just what made her appear so differently when her husband was with her. "Perhaps.” she continued, “it is because most women who are rich enough to lunch and tea at a place like this are society women, that men always seem to think we are bored with each other. Always one feels rather sorry when one sees a group of women dining without a man and one has no such ideas about a group of men. And yet I feel today that women can enjoy each other and do enjoy each other more than men enjoy each other.” Before I thought.* dear little Marquise, I said, “Yes. you are having a better time today than you had last night, aren’t you Ruth?” Ruth blushed and then she owned up honestly. “I am. I have reached a place where I am not myself in Harry's company. I wonder if you have been married long enough, Leslie, to have entered the making-over process.” “What do you mean by that, Ruth? Do all married women have to be made over?” “If you don't know,” she answered abiguously, "you haven't entered it yet. "Leslie, I was the gayest girl in my set, always laughing, always dancing and if the truth must be known, always coquetting more or less. That was the girl my husband, Harry Ellington, fell in love with and married. “Immediately he started to make me over. The first thing he found out was that I smiled too much. ‘A woman who Is always laughing when she tallfs with other men Is apt to be misunderstood,’ he said. “Then he insisted that his wife should not dance the new dances with other men and, as he did not care very much about dancing himself, I found myself sitting on the sidelines with the dowagers and women old enough to be my mother. “I have almost ceased to go out with the young people that I used to go with and the tragedy of it all is that Harry doesn't like me at all, now that I am made over. Yet he doesn't know why he doesn’t like me. He makes all sorts of excuses to go out without me. “He wants the same joyous irresponsible fun that we used to have together, the joy he will not let me give him. So he goes to some other girl to get it, never dreaming that perhaps there might be some man just over there in the offing who might tell me that he would rr 'her love me in his arms than worship me on a pedestal.” Next: The letter continued—A surprise for Ruth Ellington.
Household Suggestions
Porcelain Sinks Clean porcelain and enameled sinks with kerosene and whiting. The kerosene cuts the grease .and the whiting allows for a certain amount of friction.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
A/T artha Lee Her Column
Husband Neglectful Dear Mias Lee: I am a married woman of 31 My husband is 43 We have been married twelve years and have a baby boy 10 months old. My husband gives me all his money. He loves the baby and me But he goes Ashing every Sunday, rain or shine. And he goes to town every night and stays until 9:30 and 10 o clock. We have a nice little home. Whenever 1 say anything to my husband about spending some time at home we fuss and say things we are sorry for afterward He does not go with other women. He tells me to go and have a good time, but whenever I go I am tired out and wc-med with baby. Can you please help me to do something so that he will spend some time with his family? I don't mind his going fishing and I don’t care if he goes to town, if he would come home earlier I love him very much and don't want to be fussing al the time LONESOME HOUSEWIFE. j Fussing will do no good. The only to do Is to make your home and yourself so attractive that your husband will want to be with you more. Put on your most becoming clothes and most charming air to greet him in the evening. Have house slipper? and a comfortable chair and h!c paper ready for him. after a wholesome meal. Don't bother him with details of housework, but, If he wants to talk, get him to tell you things that Interest him. As your son grows up, your husband probably will want to be home with him more. Wait Awhile Pear Mi?* Le*: 1 Wo are two girls. 15 years old We are chums We met a couple of y -ung fellowp the other night They are from another town, but asked us for a date We made dates for Sunday afternoon, but If you say we are too young we will break cp 2. Do you think e are too young to have dates with boys of 18 • 3. Do you think it is right for chums to go car riding with boys in the early afternoon 0 4 Is It proper for hoys to take girts to hall games on 9undy rverlng? MILLIE AND BILLIE 1. Girls your age are better off with no "dates ” However, if your parents dc not object, you might let the be vs come to see you at home But don’t do this often. 2. It would be better Tor you to imit your boy friends to those nearer Jrour own age 3. Street car or automobile? This it another question for your parents to decide. I am afraid you are think leg too much of boys. 4 Even though you have no relig lous scrupjea against sports cn Sunday, you are young to make a prae tice of going to games with boys Not Jealousy Dear Miss Lee: I am 12 years old. My mother is very good to me. but my father Is jealous What shall Ido to prevent this jealous disposition* I don't run around with fello-vs but I like a certain one very much He lives many States from here and is very wealthy. I am terribly lonesome without him. Do you think it la wrong for me to love him? Sometimes I feel like taking poison, hut then I build air castles about the. future and back out. It seems a# if I cannot wait until I am IS Is It right for a girl to write to a fellow first, or a boy to a girl? BETTY. 1. Os course, your father is not jealous. Perhaps he seems harsh. Just because he is trying to prevent your doing anything you would regret later. Don't be so eager to grow up, Betty. Ive will come to you later, but don't imagine It has come now. It is all riglft to build air castles, but live In the present, as a girl of 12 should. 2. It is correct for a man to fight for a girl first. But that another thing a girl of your age need not | worry about. Summer Bride | Miss Lee: 1. For a wedding in July or i August, which would be better, a blue ; tailored suit or a dark blue dress? 2 Should the bride wear a hat when I married In the afternoon or evening? 3. What kind and color ot dres* should [ the bridesmaid wear? 4. Whose parents should a newly mari ried couple visit first? The bridegroom's i and bride's parents live tn the same cltv ' The bride never has met her husband's par- | ents. HAPPY. 1. A tailored suit always is In good i taste, but is not used as much for summer wear now as a few yeafs ago. j A dress probably would be more comj sortable. 2. A hat should be worn with a 1 dark dress, but may be omitted if | the wedding is very informal. 3. That is for the bride to decide. I The dress, of course, should corre- ! spend with the bride's. If the bride wears dark blue, the bridesmaid might wear sand, gray or lanvln green. 4 The bridegroom's family should call on the bride first. If his parents are very old or In poor health, the bride should go to see them.
C. D'eCroes The Only French Restaurant in Town LITTLE BUT GOOD Dinner Lunch From 11 to 2 Supper From 5 to 7 P. M. Wc make n specialty of pies and cakes for the home. Phone your orders the day before you need them. 215 E. Ohio Phone. Circle 3970.
“RUTH ANN, Meet Me Downtown for Lunch Tomorrow We’ll go to the Guais/anty Cafeteria for lunch—it is really the coolest place in town and it’s a nice refined place, too. Their food is deliciously prepared the vegetables taste as though they had come from the garden only a few minutes before—and their salads, crisp, cooling and served in great variety, are very refreshing these summer days.”
The Guaranty Cafeteria Circle and Meridian St. Under Hotel Lincoln Management /
6 YDS. PAJAMA CHECKS —Pajama checks, yard wide, soft finish, for pajamas and 1 underwear .. A
Summer Store Hours—B:3o to 5 P. M.; on Saturdays, 8:30 to 6 P. M.—Annex Open Until 9:00 P. M. on Saturday
♦ DOLLAR.DAY# ;
Women’s Pumps Women’s white canvas pumps, with one wide d>B strap and two buttons, yB turned soles; sizes 2% to JL 8; widths A to D. Sandals Misses’ and children’s sandals; made of brown Jl leather; with two straps yB and buckles. Sizes 5 to 1. 4 Yards Sateen Black sateen, mercerized finish; for bloomers, 71 apron dresses and lin- yB ings. 4 Yards Lawn Sheer lawn, batiste finish; in plain black, green, 71 maize, lavender, rose and $B blue; for women’s and §? children's wear. \ 5 Yards Crepe Blue and maize color only. Sheer underwear 71 crepe, offered at 5 yards yB for $1; while a United quantity lasts. 6 Yards Toweling All linen unbleached toweling; blue or white 7B taped borders; for hand yB or roller towels. jf 2 Scarfs Dresser scarfs, hemstitched; in plain tan or blue. 3 Bath Towels Size 22x41 inches; hemmed bath towels of 7B heavy, firmly woven quaJ $B ity; for home and hotel use. *•>■
Clearance Sale Summer Silks 33-Inch Printed Silk Pongee \ 36-Inch Brocaded Pink and White j Sport Skirting J * 36-Inch Colored Sports Satina....... / ” ua 1 *** 36-Inch Printed Poplit.s „ f 36-Inch Silk Foulards \ 36-Inch Colored Rajah Silk > TH 33-Inch Colored Silk Pongees / Bp 40-Inch Plaid Crepe Shirtings I 40-Inch Crepe de Chine Skirtings. .. Ii Bp 32-Inch Satin Striped Tub Silks I Color and Pattern Assortments Are j Somewhat Broken / (Goldstein'*. Street Floor)
Men’s Union Suits Men’s finely ribbed jm light weight cotton union d>B suits. In ecru color. yB Choice of long or short sleeves. Ankle length. Also athletic style union suits, without sleeves; knee length. Sizes 34 to 46. Men’s Work Shirts Full cut shirts, made of medium blue chambray aB with double yoke and yB shoulders; sizes 14 1 ,4 to JL 17. Collar attached style. 2 Union Suits Men’s checked nainsook union suits, athletic style, £B without sleeves; knee yB length; sizes 34 to 44. Table Cloths Made of bleached damask, size 58x58 inch- SB es; in neat center designs, wide borders. JL 2 1 /2 Yards Crepe Dress crepe, 36 Inches wide, In tan, yellow, or- £B ange, navy and green, YB for dresses. JL Extra Special 12 Yds. Toweling Bleached toweling, with red borders, fast colored d>B selvage, very ‘absorbent.; yB for hand or kitchen tow- JL els; limit 12 yards to customer, 12 yards, sl. 3 Yards Madras Colored madras, for men’s shirts and boys’ <£fl waists, in neat striped B designs, 3 yards, sl. 4 Bodice Vests Women’s very finely tl m ribbed soft finish cotton 7B vests, in bodice top style, yB in white or pink; regularly 35c, sale price, 4 for sl. 3 Yards Suiting Beach suiting, yard wide in all the wanted plain d>B shades for women’s mid- yB dies and dresses, 3 yards, £ 91. 8 Yards Lawn A large variety of attractive floral patterns, <j>B fast colors, desirable for yB cool summer dresses, 8 yards, sl.
Goldstein Brothers WASHINGTON & DELAWARE STREETS
Sale: Pure Linen Dresses A Special Tuesday Offering Regular s£.so fl iMI $lO Values — H jg Trimmed With Hand-Drawn Work, Hand Embroidery m CH Ia Touches of White Organdy, Pleats and Tucks Jim ordinary linen dress would be a good value at $6.50 —but these ft O r are li Qen dresses of the better kind — trimmed with dainty handm a J drawn work —and giving expression to summer smartest styles ideas J U y / Straightline effects predominate, and such tailored touches as smart L ? / collars, belts, hemstitching and embroidery. In Green, White, Rose, Yellow, Brown and Other New Colors. UgITT (1 Sizes 14 to 44. wy (Goldstein'*. Second Floorß
3 Yards Shirting 32-Inch madras shirting, with neat woven $B stripes. In white only. 10 Yds. Longcloth Useful lengths, soft finIsh; for women’s, chil- sfl dren’s and infants' wear. 5 Yds. Nainsook Ya r d-w id e nainsook, *0 flest colors, for women's <?■ and children's wear. 5 y* yards, sl. A
8 Yards Netting Mosquito netting, in black, white and green. <j>B 58 inches wide, 8-yard yB bolt, 91. JL 6 Yards Sheeting Unbleached sheeting. 40 inches wide, an excellent 7B quality; requires but 2 yB widths lor a large size JL sheet; 6 yards, <ll. 5 Yards Ticking Straw ticking, 32 Inches wide, blue and white stripes. Durable quality. 4 Yds. Slip Covering Slip covering for auto seats, furniture or mat- ?B tresses, light (tan grounds, yB in neat stripes. JL 8 Yards Muslin Unbleached muslin, suitable for sheets and gen- 7B eral horiie use. Excellent yB quality. JL 3 Yards Oilcloths White oilcldth, 45 Inches w-ide, good quality, JB specially priced, 3 yards, yB *i. JL Bathing Suits Women’s cotton bathing suits, In black with white *B trimmings; V neck and yB belted; sizes 38 to 46. JL 2 Petticoats Women’s gingham petticoats, in blue or grey d>B stripes, flounced hems; YB draw string top. JL Middies Women's and children’s white Lonsdale jean mid- 7B dies, regulation yoke Yl styles; set-in pockets; sizes 6 to 22, sl. Sweaters Girls’ slipover sweaters, of light weight wool yarn, d>B long sleeves, round necks, yB sizes 6 to 12, sl. JL 5 Pillow Cases Bleached pillow cases, *jß| made of round thread mus- j)B lin, size 42x36 inches. 2 Cushions 18-inch round cushions, made of cretonne in floral patterns, 2 for sl. *
TUESDAY, JULY 10
2 Trimmed Hats, SI.OO f 200 Smart Midsummer Styles Represented Made of good quality straw or braid, trimmed with ribbon, flowers or ornaments, these hats are undoubtedly splendid values at 2 for sl. Children’s Hats, Specially Priced, sl. Sizes 3to 12 Years. (Goldstein’*, Third Floor)
Pillows Filled with clean, sanitary feathers, covered 7B with fancy art ticking; yB size 21x27 Inches, each, sl. Blankets Cotton blankets, single bed size, in grey, with 7B pink or blue borders; for yB home or camp use; size JL 64x76 Inches. Boys’ Suits Boys' baseball and flapper suits, made of grey sfl striped flannel and khaki cloth, sizes i to 8 years.
Miscellaneous Garments For Women and Children 2 for $1 Odds and ends of merchandise, soiled or mussed from display, in incomplete size and color ranges. Just one or two garments of a kind, to be cleared away at this low price. Included are children's cotton pongee blouses, muslin gowns and one knit cape; also women’s petticoats, aprons, bathing suits, middies and dressing sacques.
Boys’ Hats Boys’ hats, made of straw, to be cleared away sfl at 91. Bathing Suits Men’s one-piece bathing , suits, with skirt. Choice SB * of navy trimmed with red yB and maroon, trimmed with white. 2 Aprons Women's aprons, made of standard quality per- d>B cale, trimmed with rick- yB rack, some slightly soiled JL from display. Regular 85c quality, 2 for 91* Pair Curtains Ruffled marquisette curtains, 2V* yards long, 7B white, with tie backs to yB match. Pair, 91. 8 Yards Voile Voile, in green, blue, rose and brown; in dainty 7B figured designs for mid- yB summer draperies, 8 yards, B^ 91. 10 Yards Scrim Fancy scrim, in white, cream and ecru; plain or 7B with fancy borders. Spe- yB cial, 10 yards. 91. JL 2 Yards Drapery Drapery in rose, mulberry and brown; wide $1 enough to divide. 3 Yards Cretonne 5,000 Yards of beautiful cretonnes, in lovely oa floral designs, for porch, yB draperies, etc.; also double faced cretonnes in rich tapestry colorings. 3 yards, 91.
12 TOWELS—Huck towels, nicely hemmed, with red or white Q borders %p 1
Wash Suits Boys’ suits, made of good quality wash fab- Tfl rics, in Oliver Twist $B and middy styles, sizes 1 3 to 8 years, unsurpassed values at sl.
2 Bandeaux Made of llnene, In white or flesh, cut extra 7B long, for the full figure. yB Elastic inserts. Sizes 38 to 62. Special, 2 for sl. 3 Corsets Made of batiste or ■ coutil, medium, low or 73 high bust models. In y|| white or flesh color. j§ Sizes 19 and 20. 3 Bloomers Made of crepe muslin or batiste, in flesh color; reg- JB ular and extra sizes. 3 yB for sl. JL 2 Chemises or Gowns Made of crepe, muslin or batiste, in white or flesh. $B Chemises are trimmed with lace and embroid- JL erv; gowns plain tailored or trimmed with embroidery. For women.
Slipover Sweaters Made of all wool or wool and fiber combinations. In buff, brown, navy, black, canary, JL jade. Copen and jockey red; sizes 36 to 44. For women.
$1.50 Lunch Kits Black Japanned metal lunch kits, fitted with pint size imported vacuum hot- yB tie. J. Toilet Goods 16 Cakes Palmolive soap,, 15 Cakes Jap Rose soap .. £B 17 Cakes Auditorium bath soap 2 Extra Size Union Suits Women’s finely ribbed soft finish cotton union tB suits, with band top and g tight knee. Sizes 46 and 48. Regulrly 59c, sale price, 2 for 91. 5 Pairs Half Hose Children’s finely iner- ' cerized half hose, in light 7B and dark colors, fancy yB striped cuff top. Regular JL 25c quality, 5 pairs, 91. 2 Pairs Hose Women’s art silk hose, semi-fashioned, double 7B cotton garter top, in yB black, white and colors. JL Regular 59c quality, 2 pairs, 91. 8 Handkerchiefs Men’s full size soft finish cambric handker- Tfl * chiefs, with colored yB woven or satin stripe border. Regular 15c quality, 8 for 91. 4 Handkerchiefs Men’s fine qua 1 i t'y linen handkerchiefs, hem- 7B stitched hems, full site; yB regular 35c quality, 4 for 91. /, v
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