Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 7, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1924 — Page 5

MONDAY, MAY 19, 1924

ROM WOMEN WILL COSTUME , FOR CARD PARTY Reservations Made for 109 Tables at Mali Jongg and Bridge Benefit. Young women in Chinese costume were to receive guests at the mah jongg and bridge party to be given Monday night in the Propylaeum, 140 N. Delaware St., by the Woman’s Rotary Club. They were also to assist Mrs. Willard New in distribution of prizes. This mah jongg committee was to include Mrs. Sarah Major Avery, chairman, and Misses India Wilson, Marie Bowen, Man' Chilton Gray, Katherine Kautz, Jessie Boyce, Bessie Morgan, Mary Gavin, Mrs. Marie Dawson Morrell and Mrs. Belle Fishback. Mrs. Olive Edwards and Miss Dorothy Cunningham were to assist Mrs. New on the prize committee. The rooms were to be decorated in white and lavender lilacs and snowballs. Mrs. O. W. Brooks and Mrs. Louise S. Koenig were to be in charge of candy sales by a committee of girls, including Misses Katherine Jane Allison, Charlotte Flickinger, Rosalind Hammond, Margaret Chandler, Mary Louise Minick, Miller, Dorothy Jane HartAlice Ball, Josephine Duckwall and Ruth Otte. Miss Elizabeth Browning was to be chairman of-the .bridge committee. Mrs. Henry Ketcham, Mrs. John N. Carey, Dr. Marie Mueller and Miss Serene Ohr were to assist. Mrs. Walter R. Meyer has been general chairman of arrangements. Miss Florence B. York has been in charge of the ticket sale. There have been reservations for more 'than 109 tables. Proceeds w'ill be used for educational fund. Charter Night Arranged . Veritas Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons of Brightwood, will observe charter r.ight Saturday. It is expected that fourteen of the sixteen living charter members will be present. The lodge was organized May 26, 1896.

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LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT TO SYDNEY CARTON Got your letter, old scout, and am glad you’re getting- on so well. Am better to postpone your visit until Leslie’s return. She will be home in two or three days. She writes me that her sister Alice has developed into something surprising while she was in England. I gather from Leslie’s letters —not from anything she says, but from the tone of them—that she is rather a disagreeable sort of young woman, and I have come to pity Karl Whitney with all my heart. I think you would smile, Sydney, If you should see how many filial qualities I am developing. My mother came, you know, the day that Leslie went away. Os course 1 am very fond of her, but she is rather a captious old lady, you know—believes in the' superiority cf the clan that descended from John Alden of Mayflower fame. Since she has been here I have gone to church with her—think of that, Sydney! I have entertained ♦he minister at dinner —and, by the way. Syd, I found him intensely interesting—very modern in his ideas, i.nd thoroughly businesslike in his application of them to the needs of his congregation. I don’t think mother quite approved of him, especially as he smoked cigarers after dinner, and discussed the influence of the latest play, the current movie, and the •rend of politics. You would have hought that he was a vefy well informed man. There was no cant cr hypocrisy about him. I liked him well enough, Syd, to invite him to come again when Leslie was home. Honestly, I didn’t know that the modern preacher was so interesting All that I remember about a preacher was the one that used to scare us to death with the threat of eternal punishment, -when I was a boy. Now they are more concerned with what you do here, and how you help to improve your race and your world rather than about the degree of heat which will px-obahly sizzle you in the next. Mother's nurse and companion, a Miss Anderson, is very charming and clever woman, and she has the greatest influence over the mater. She has made it perfectly apparent to my mother that my house should be run for me and not for the sake of the servants and furniture in it. Mother did not even find any fault when T brought Mrs. Atherton home Says: It Ends Neuralgia “No matter where located—to get quiek relief from the agony rub on stainless Joint-Ease,” says a New EngJL* nd chemist. Os course, Joint-Ease is the one great external remedy for inflamed, swollen, stiff joints in ankle, knee, hip, shoulder, fingers or spine, and for that purpose its sale is tremendous. But its power to give almost instant relief in neuralgia, neuritis and lumbago is becoming better known every #ay—Soaks right in with a minutes tubbing—A tube 60 cents. Always remember when Joint-Ease gets in joint troubles get out—quick, kook Drug Cos. sells lots of Joint-Ease. —Advertisement.

hi Charge

MRS. ALEXANDER HAMILTON

MISS ELDENA LAUTER —Photos by Bachrach. Miss Eldena Lauter is in charge of the committee of patrons and patronesses for the Little Theater ball to be given May 22 on the roof garden at the Severin. Mrs. Alexander Hamilton is chairman of the reception committee.

to dinner a half an hour late the other n-ght. Os course she has nothing to do with the running of the house, but I fully expected not only to be found fault with for being late to dinner, hut also for bringing my secretary home with me. Miss Anderson very tactfully conveyed the news to mother, however, that Mrs. Atherton was an old school friend of Leslie’s. I don’t think mother, however, would have been so complacent had she known that Leslie’s eld school friend had never been in our house before. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: LETTER FROM JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT TO SYDNEY CARTON, CONTINUED.

GOOD MANNERS Takes Off Hat GENTLEMAN takes off his hat and holds it in his hand when a woman enters the elevator in which he is a passenger, but he puts it on again in the corridor. Household Suggestions Removing Paint One of the most effective ways to remove old paint is to wash with either sal soda or strong washing powder and water. Stuffed Tomatoes Tomatoes stuffed with finely shredded cabbage are an excellent salad since they contain sufficient vitamine food for the whole day. Washing Dishes Many housekeepers prefer soap flakes to bar soap for dishwashing as it makes a quick, thick suds. Salad Dressing When you are short on mayonnaise di'essing add a little whipped cream and it will go much fux-ther. 0 Cleaning Mops A dishmop should really be hoiled out every day, but if this Is not done, it should be kept for live minutes in a pan of boiling water.

PROGRAM HOLDS MUCH INTEREST TOR CLUB WOMEN Many Indianapolis Members to Attend Federation Biennial in California. Indianapolis women who wall attend biennial convention of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs at Los Angeles, Cal., June 2-13 will include Mesdames I. E. Brokaw, J. M. Dungan, W. H. Hart, Charles Gemmer, Samuel Oshby, O. M. Pittenger, Indiana State president; Mrs. Felix T. McWhirter; E. W. Stickdale, E. C. Rumpler, Edward Franklin White, Charles H. Augstein, E. O. Merritt, Elbert J. Sturer, J. B. Phillips and Misses Ethel Clelland, Jeanette Matthews, Hilda Gemmer, Myra White. A number of women and their husbands will attend. They will include Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Gillespie, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Marks, Mr and Mrs. John S. Chambers, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Plummer. Interesting Program An interesting program has been arranged for the 10,000 women expected. Eight nations will be represented. Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, will speak on ‘ The American Home.” Among those who will lead discussions are Carrie Chapman Catt, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr., Gene Stratton Porter and Rupert Hughes. Music, arranged by Mrs. Marx Oberndorfer, Chicago, will be provided on each program by Ossip Gabrilowitsch, pianist. Federation Speakers Among the hundred or more Federation speakers will be Cora Wilson Stewart. Frankfort, Ky.. founder of moonlight schools for the eradication of illiteracy; Katharine K. Robbins, Chicago, founder of "Better American Speech” movements; Mrs. W. I. Higgins, "the Christmas Tree Lady,\ Deer Lodge. Mont.; Albion Fellows Bacon, writer, Evansville, Ind.; Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker, past president, Austin, Texas; Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, president, and the department chairman; Mrs. Rose V. S. Berry, New York, Fine Arts; Mrs. Elmer Blair, New York, Public Welfare; Lessie Siringfellow Read, press; Mrs. Edward Franklin White, Indianapolis, Ind., legislation; Mrs. John D. Sherman, Estes Park, Colo., education; will be in charge of all-day programs each. Excursions to all parts of California, to Luther Burtank’s famous experimental gardens, to motion picture plants, include some of the pleasurable events planned.

Lee’s Coin m n Quick-Tempered Husband Dear Miss I,ee: I am 26 years old and havo been married three times. The first time, I was only 16 and my husband. 21. A girl was .born to us. My husband started going with another woman. 1 got a divorce. In a year, remarried. This man was good to my baby and me for two years He became jealous of the. baby. He didn t want her to go anywhere or have any playmates. Finally I got a divorce and went to work. My third man is 40. He never had been married He had taken care of his mother fifteen years, and had reared two little brothers and a sister. We were married last January. His mother died a month later. My husband is awfully good to my baby and me. But he gets angry over little things. He doesn't want me to go to my neighbors He calls me very day at noon and expects me to answer If Igo down town, I have to be back by noon. A neighbor woman died a few weeks ago. I went to the funeral which lasted until 11:45. The man asked me to stay and lock the door for him. I sent my little girl home to answer the telephone and tell my husband why I wasn't home. Ke cursed when the child tpld him. Please tell me how to cure him of this quick temper. I love him more every day. and we could live the happiest of lives if he didn't have these spells. P. C. G. It’s time for you to assert your rights. There is no reason on earth why you should be forced to stay home all the time. And, of course, you will not allow your husband to curse before your child. Warn him that he must curb his temper or you will leave. Tell him how much you love him —so much that you can not stay and watch him grow into a grouchy old man, impossible to live with. Also, when he complains about your being away from home, you might remind him that even a servant is given some recreation—and you are more than a servant to him. Friendship Needed Dear Miss Lee: (1) lam a school girl, 14 years old. I think the world of a girl fnend nearly one year older. She is a natural leader iu all sorts of activities and is very popular. Lately she has gone crazy over the boys. She thinks she loves a boy 17. I think she is merely infatuated! 4 She talks of eloping with him. but says there is a widower 45 years old. He has four small children and a step daughter of 13. He wants my friend to marry him. He buys her books, flowers, candy, etc*., while his children haven’t a decent home. Do you I should discontinue going with this girl or try to make her see that she is doing wrong? 2. What is yoqr opinion of girls 16 and 17 who smoke cigarettes? BILLY MAE. 1. This girl needs a friend now, if she ever needed one. Stick by her as long as you can. Don’t preach to her; that won’t help. It wouldn’t hurt to let her know, occasionally, what a “nice old man” you think the widower is, but how you simply never could trust a man who neglected his children to give presents to others. And then, it mljht do some good to mention —quite incidentally, of course—ccses of very young girls who married men they thought they loved, and then found out It was only “puppy after all. The power of suggestion sometimes can be used to great advantage. 2. Much the same as my opinion of boys of that age who do the same thing. The fact that it is unhealthful is more important than the fact that it is “unlady-like.” Double Buckles Double buckles are a novelty in pump accessories. Small buckles are frequently used at the side instead of directly in front.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Woman’s Home Instinct Unspoiled by Business Success

By HORTENSE SAUNDERS i NEA Service Writer UFFALO, N. Y„ May 19 jj From office girl to general " 1 manager of the largest paper box factory in the world was jump, but Mary Cass of Buffalo cleared it successfully. And, automatically* the slender, $4-a-week pay envelope developed into a robust healthy income—one of the largest achieved by any woman in this country. Big business has never crowded out her home instinct, but rather developed it, and she has some very definite theories about home life. “To be successful in business, I think it is absolutely necessary for a woman to have a good, comfortable home and to surround herself with the comforts her feminine nature calls for,” she says. “Hall bedrooms, boarding houses and hotel rooms are all wrong for the woman who can afford better.” Miss Cass not only provides a home for herself but for the son she adopted when he was 4 and who is now ready t*or college. And when it seemed necessary to provide a home for the husband and two children of her housekeeper in order to keep the housekeeper, Miss Cass did not hesitate to ac-

Club Notes, Parties and Social Activities

TSS MARY ELLEN NOLL, 4166 Ruckle St., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Noll, was to entertain Monday night with a bridge of three tables and a linen shower for Miss Naomi Schaffer, whose marriage to John E. Burke will take place Thursday morning. The guests: Misses Louise O’Reilly, Helen Markey, Martina Shea, Gertrude Fogarty, Lucille Roth. Bernice Fralich, Dorothy Stoltz, Catherine Clegg. Mrs. Herman Gains and Mrs. S. Brown. Miss No)l was to be assisted by her mother. * • * Mrs. Bert Mcßride was hostess Monday for the closing meeting of the Monday Luncheon Bridge < ’lub at the Woodstock Country' Club at luncheon. There were guests at three tables, prettily arranged with bit-s----hots of spring flowers. * • • Mrs. Owen L. Milier, 3933 Washington Blvd., entertained members of\the Monday Conversation Club and guests today at the annual spring guest day party. Masses of orchid and pink spring flowers decorated the rooms. The tea table was presided over by Mrs. Ernest DeWolf Wales and -Mrs. Charles Yoke. Assisting in the dining room were Mesdames Hadley K. Greet*, diaries Williams, E. J. Kaker and Robert Gilliand. V Receiving with Mrs. Miller were Miss Alice Newell, president; Mrs. < B. Biakeslee, and Mrs. Green and Mrs. C. S. Dearborn. Assisting hostesses were Mrs. E. R. Kskew, Mrs. Roy Adams and Mrs. Charles Campbell. Mrs. Edna Denham Raymond, poetess gave a program of original verses and a talk on poetry. A trio consisting of Miss Lorinda Cottlngham, v-olinist; Miss Susan Grey Shedd, pianist, and Richard Hoberg, flutist, gave a program. • # ♦ Dr. and Mrs. T. C. Day. 1628 N. Meridian St., entertained informally from 3 to 5 this afternoon for Mr. and Mrs. Huntington Day, a bride and groom, who are motoring from New Jersey to Jasper, Ala., where they will live. Dr. Day, is a grandson of Dr. and Mrs. Day, is a graduate of Yale. Mrs. Day is from Essex Falls, N. J. * * • Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Marie Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Moore, 1422 N. Pennsylvania St., to Chester Neal, son of and Mrs. H. W. Neal, Sunday morning at the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. The Bishop Joseph F. Chartrand officiated. • • • Mis Mary Evelyn Riley, who has been teaching in Pensacola, Fla., has returned home to spend the summer

vSisterfkuy'sKitclien.

LOSE WEIGHT One-half cup stewed rhubarb. 1 thin crisp slice 'bacon, ’.-a cup crab meat salad, cheese omelet, 1 cup spinach. Va he;id lettuce. 3 tablespoons prune whip, 2 thin erisy pieces whole w'heat toast. 1 toasted brau muffin, 1 gluten roll, 1 pint skimmed milk. Ttotal calories. 1,010. Protein. 202; fat, 277; carbohydrate, 510. iron, .0180 gram. Cheese Omelet (Individual) Two eggs, 1 tablespoon grated cheese. 1 tablespoon skimmed milk, 1 teaspoon butter. >4 teaspoon salt, few grains pepper, dash mustard. Beat whites and yolks of eggs separately. Beat yolks with milk until thick and lemon colored. Add salt, pepper and mustard and cut into whites beaten until stiff and dry on a platter with a wire whisk. Melt butter in frying pan and when very hot .turn in eggs. Cook over a slow fire until puffy. Then put in the oven to cook the top. When firm to the touch sprinkle with grated cheese and roll or fold as preferred. Serve at once. Total calories, 237. Protein. 64: fat, 160; carbohydrate. 4. Iron. .0032 gram. Serve the crab meat in little cucumber boats on a bed of lettuce. GAIN WEIGHT One-half cup stewed rhubarb, 2 crisp pieces bacon, 3 ounces fried liver, 4 tablespoons creamed potatoes, Vi cup crab meat salad with 2 tablespoons mayonnaise, 1 cup cream of asparagus soup, 1 veal bird, 1 large twice baked potato, 1 cup creamed spinach, % head lettuce with 2 tablespoons Russian dressing, 4 tablespoons prune whip with 1 tablespoon chopped nuts and 2 tablespoons whipped cream. 1 cup custard, 1 large piece fudge cake, 2 toasted bran muffins, 2- salad roll a. 2 dinner rolls, 4 tablespoons butter, 1 pint whole milk. Total calories, 4,118. Protein. 486; fat. 1.6513; carbohydrate, 1,939. Iron. .0209 gram. Veal Birds (For Four) Two thin slices veal steak (about 1 pound). 1 cup chopped English walnuts or pecans, 2 epus soft stale bread crumbs, % teaspoon onion juice. 1 teaspoon salt. V s teaspoon pepper, 4 tablespoons melted butter, 1 egg. 1 aup cream. The steak should be as thin as possible. If more than one-quarter inch thick, pound to the desired thickness. Trim off fat and remove

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MISS MARY CASS cept three more additions to the family. “The unmarried woman in busi-

, with her mother, Mrs. C. W. Phillips, 1701 N. Capi'.ti Ave. • * The executive officers and chairmen of standing committees of the Indianapolis Indorsers of Photoplays entertained Monday at luncheon at the Lincoln for George Behan who is appearing at the Circle Theater. There were covers for

Striped Satin £%■: mm IP LACK and white striped satin, such as this, is so i ____ decorative in Itself that even cut on the simple:.t lines it takes on an elaborate air. Here the stripes go aroutiiAon the skirt and under the arms, but go up and down on the sleeves and front. Six wide tucks at the hem, a few steel-colored buttons and a tasseled scarf are effectively used.

hone. Cut meat in four pieces. Combine crumbs and nuts. Add seasoning and mix well. Toss with melted butter until well mixed. Add egg unbeaten, and stir with a fork until j mixture will hold together. Divide I into quarters and put one portion on each piece of meat, pull meat edges together to cover stuffing completely and fasten with tooth-picks. Saute ' quickly to a golden brown on all sides in hot bacon fat. Remove to j a baking dish, add cream and bake i in a moderate oven from 60 to 60 ] minutes. Serve on a hot platter I with the gravy poured over the “birds.” Total calorie!-, 3.056. Protein. 438; fat, 2,171; carbohydrate, 440. Iren, .0,44 gram. (Copyright. 1924, NEA Service. Inc.) GAIN WEIGHT One wliolo largo orange, % cup cooked wheat cereal with 1 dessertspoon sugar and (4 cup cream, 4 commeal pancakes with 2 tablespoons butter and 4 tablespoons maple sirup. 2 heaping tablespoons potato souffle, 1 cup creamed dried beef or 2 pork chops. 4 tablespoons apple sauce. 1 cup beet greens with 1 tablespoons hot tartar sauce, 1 cup cream of mushroom soup, 2 lamb chops en casserole, 4 ounces water cress with 2 tablespoons French dressing, 4 ounces fresh cherries. 4 table- j spoons frozen rice pudding, 2 tablespoons i whipped cream, 2 nut rolls. 2 slices bread, 3 tablespoons butter, 1 pint whole milk. 3 new potatoes in parsley butter. Total calories, 4.067. Protein. 466. fat. ! 1,691; carbohydrate, 1,910. Iron. .0191 gram. As It’s sometimes a bother to make two creamed dishes, the pork chops and apple sauce are suggested for the gaining menu. Left-over mashed potatoes are combined with eggs beaten separately and baked in individual molds or one large one for the potato souffle. The rice pudding is suggested for the luncheon dessert. No eggs are used. The rice is cooked until soft I in milk and water, combined with j sugar and sifted stewed or canned ■ fruit pulp. Half the bulk of rice is the proportion for the whipped*! cream what is folded in just before | freezing. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) I

ness who has a good income should adopt one or more children,” she went on ,“and train them to be good citizens. “It is my observation that women who have been successful in business make excellent mothers, whether the children they train are their own or not. They give a child his head and direct him rather than lay out his life. “Any woman who has been an executive herself knows the qualities she looks for in others and realizes a child needs certain contacts and experiences by means of which he learns for himself. Without having learned thorough contact with many people shortcomings that contribute least to success, a woman has a natural instinct to shield her child from the unpleasant angles of life. “In business or domestic life there Is one precept I place above all others, ‘Rely on yourself. Use your own head.” Cooperation Is another point she stresses. “Give every person the full responsibility of his job,” she advises. ‘Bear with his mistakes at first and teach him. But if he will not learn get rid of him and give the opportunity to someone who will improve it.” Miss Cass has about a thousand people working for her, of whom more than half are women.

thirty. Mrs. B. C. Schmidt was general chairman, assisted by Mrs. O. C. Luckenbill. Mr. Beban and Mrs. C. C. Derbyshire talked. The guests attended a theater party at the Circle. • * * The Ladies Aid of the First Moravian Episcopal Church will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Charles Fishel, 2644 Sutherland Ave. • • • Alvin P. Hovey W. R. C. No. 196, will give a card party Tuesday night in the G. A. R. Hall, 222 E. Maryland St. • • Lavelle Gosset Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will entertain with cards Tuesday night in the hall, 902 N. Pershing Ave. • • • Engine House No. 13, will be presented with an American flag Thursday afternoon by Mrs. Nettie Bird, patriotic instructor of the George H. Chapman W. R. C. Comrades of the G. A. R. and their friends will be guests. 0 0 0 Mrs. J. B. Roberson, 2315 W. Washington St., will entertain the Amicus Club Thursday at luncheon.

114 N. Penn. St, Wjf j|k 53 S. Illinois St, 55 Virginia Ave, Fm. Am. 1 27 S. Illinois St. 802 Mass. Ave. 103 W. Wash. St. 816 N. Ala. St. Cut Price Drugs 156 N. Illinois St. You Can Buy the Best for Less at HAAG’S HAAG’S EVERY-DAY PRICES

SI.OO Abbott’s Saline Laxative. .74c GOo Abbott's Saline Laxative ..39c $1.25 Abbott’s Rheumatism Item.9Bc $2 50 Ahsorblne $1.98 $1.25 Ahsorblne Jr 98c 50c Abilena Water 850 35c Allen Uleerine Salve 29c 75c Alaphen Rills (100) 490 50c Alvin Stryeh. and Bell Pi11..34c 25c Alcack’s Porous Plasters ....150 $1.25 Alkallthia 98c 20c Aspirin Tab.. 1 do*., Bayer's. 120 $1.23 Aspirin Tablets, Bayer’s..Bßc 50c Badex Salts S9c 25c Beacbam’s Pills .....19c 25c Bel la ns J9o 75c Bellans 59c 25c Barkeeper’s Friend ..........19c SI.OO Bitro Phosphates ..........84c 50c Bleach Odont 39c 25c Borden Eagle Milk. 3 f0r,.,.50c SI.OO Bliss Native Herb Tablets.74c $1 25 Bnlmwort Tablets BBe 25c Burkhardt's Veg. Tablets ...19c 30c Brotno Seltzer 23c ROc Bromo Seltzer 46c $1.20 Bromo Seltzer 89c $1.50 Brownatone $1.19 $l5O Ondomene Tablets ........980 25c Calomel (any size) ..........10c (10c California Syrup Figs 49c 40c Camphor Spirits ........250 60c Canthrox 49c 3A’ Capudine 24c 50c Cascara Arom. Sweet, 4 0*....25c 50c Cascara Bitter, 3 oz 25c 50e Cascara Cartbartlc, Hinkle...24c 15c Carbolic Acid 100 35c Castor Oil, pure, half pint..2sc 60c Castor Oil, pure, pint 35c 25c Carter's Little Liver Pi115....19c $1.50 Carlsbad Sprudel Salts ....98c 25c Celery Vesce .......19c 50c Celery Vesoe .......39c SI.OO Celery Vesce ....74c 50c Clayton Mange Cure 39c 50c Clayton Dog Remedies .......89c 35c Corega 29c 15c Comp. Licorice Powder 10c 60c Calcium Wafers 39c 6(>c Chase Blood and Nerve Tab..49c 35c Danderine 29c 60c Danderine 49c SI.OO Danderine 74c 25c De Lost Headache Powder.. 19c 40c Denatured Alcohol, quarts..2sc (10c Dewitt’s Kidney Pills 39c 60c Doan’s Kidney Pills ........45c 25c Dioxogen 190 10c Diamond Dye. Boi 2 for 16c 50c Eatonic .........39c 60c Epsomade Salts 49c 10c Epsom Salts .....5c $1.50 Estivin for Hay Fever ....8c SI.OO Enos Fruit Salts 85c $1.50 Fellow’s Comp. Syr. Hypo. .#Bc 35c Freezone for Corns 29c 75e Gentry Mange Remedy ...49c 85c Gets-It for Corns .......... ,29c 75c Glyeotanphene *s9c 80c Glycuthymoline ............. ,45c 80c Glycothymoline 240 85c Jad Salts 69® 50c Bicycle Playing Cards 39c $3.00 Chamois Skin .....$2.24 $2.50 Chamois Skin .. $1.98 $2.00 Chamois Skin ...$1,49 85c Auto Sponges 09c $2.00 Wool SponC'l3 $1.48 25c Haag's Pills for Biliousness. .25c 60c Hay’s Hair Health 49c 35c Haarlem Oil Cap, Gold M 290 50c Horlick’s Malted Milk 39c SI.OO Horlick’s Malted Milk ®...69e $3.75 Horlick’s Malted Milk $2.98 $1.25 Hood’B Sarsaparilla 89c 75c Imperial Granum ..,59c $1.25 Imperial Granum ..890 SI.OO I*avoris 0 25c Lavorls ...,...19c 25c Listerine .. 19c

All Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobaccos at Cut Prices HAAG’S PRICES ARE LOWER The Stores That Really Cut Prices

MODEL UNIT TO PRESENT LEGION AUXILIARY RITUAL Officers of Seventh District to Be Hostess Tuesday Night. - The Seventh district council officers of the American Legion Auxiliary will he hostesses for reception to follow the model unit meeting Tuesday night in Naval Reserve headquarters, 14 E. North St. Mrs. G. I. Seybert is general chairman and Mrs. H. K. Bachelder, chairman of decorations, which will be early spring flowers, iris, snowballs and spirea. Miss Natalie Coffin, assisted by Mrs. W. H. Long, Mrs. Dan Mooney, Mrs. Albert J. Andrus and Mrs. Forest Marlett, will he in charge of refreshments. Miss Melissa Jane Cornelius will sing national anthems of the five allied countries of the World War. Mrs. Alice Renz will play the part of Madame Brunot of France, after which Miss Cornelius will sing “La Marseillaise.” The queen of Belgium, represented by Mrs. Fae Nisley, will tell of the part Belgium played In the late war. Mrs. Frank Henley, wife of the Indiana department adjutant, will tell of England’s participation in the late war. Mrs. Jessie Hoover as the queen of Italy, will extend greetings to America. Mrs. Edna M. Barcus, will represent the United States. Mrs. Dorothy Harper has directed the formation of the unit, whose purpose will be to exemplify the ritual of the American Legion Auxiliary- Other participants are; Miss Bess B. Wetherholt, Mrs. Hazel Workman, Mrs. Lucy Boyd, Mrs. Donna Guy Akin, Mrs. Cecelia Wenz, Mrs. Claire P. Thurston, Miss Margaret Gauss, Mrs. Dorothy Ashley, Mrs. Nellie Peterson, Mrs. Frank Long and Miss Helen Silcox.

Preserving Eggs If yo'tt put down, your own eggs, E -I J be sure to see that they are always entirely covered with the preservative.

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MERCATORS’ PROGRAM Richard Lieber to Be Luncheon Speaker Tuesday. Richard Lieber, State conservation director will speak to Mercators at luncheon at the Spink-Arms Tuesday. Walter D. Niman is silent booster. Regular .ticket for Mercator election, June 3: Charles A. Hochensmith, president; William G. Ulrich, secretary; Frank G. Laird, treasurer and Walter H. Scales, director. Independent Ticket; Walter G. Ulrich, president; Clare G. Cameron, vice president; Dr. George M. King, secretary; C. Elbert Bushong, treasurer and William Rubush, director. GIRL SCOUTS IN EXHIBIT Portray Work With Stunts and Tableaux at Rally. Work, Ideals and aims of the Girl Scout movement were portrayed Saturday in the stunts and a tableaux at a rally in the N. S. Naval Reserve Auditorium. The thirty-two troops of the city, under direction of Miss India Wilson, joined in a program. Troop 21 won the prize for the best exhibit, Troop 2, second prize; Troop 10, third, and Trooop 7, honorable mention. Judges were S. E. Perkin, 111, Miss Carrie Scott ai}d Miss Dorothy Blair. Realtors to Visit White House Indianapolis realtors who will attend the convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards in Washington, D. C., June 3-6, were interested today in announcement that a visit to the White House and trip by special car to Arlington National Cemetery are on the program.

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