Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 79, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1924 — Page 3

SATURDAY, AUG. 9, 1924

ASSEMBLY HALL WILL BE ERECTED AT GAR. HOME Federated Patriotic Societies Plan Campaign to Raise Fund, A, new assembly hall in rear of Grand Army of the Republic home, 512 X. Illinois St., is planned by Federated Patriotic Societies of which Mrs. Edna Pauley is president. The hall, accommodating 40# persons, will cost about $6,000. With $2,000 in the treasury, the remainder Is expected to be raised in September by selling 10,000 tickets for 50 cents each, the cost of a brick. Several lawn fetes have been given for the fund. Dr. Sol Reynolds gave the home to the veterans. It opens at 8 a. m. daily. Once a month a dinner is given for the veterans. The thirty-ninth annual reunion of the Persimmon Brigade will be held at the home,- Sept. 3. Dinner will be served by Anderson Women's Relief Corps Xo. 44. The brigade, composed of four Indiana regiments, received its name while in Tennessee, where the soldiers lived on persimmons for several days. * Three candidates were initiated Thursday afternoon by Alvin P. Hovey, Woman’s Relief Corps Xo. 196, of which Mrs. M. L. Vanderhoff Is president.

SORORITY TO GIVE . RAINBOW DINNER Alpha Delta Theta Rush Party Monday, The active chapter of Alpha Delta Theta Sorority has completed plans for its first rush party of the season, a progressive rainbow dinner Monday evening. The party will start at the home of Miss Eloise Luzader, 108 S. Butler Ave., proceeding to the homes of Misses Leese Worth, Catherine Dodson, Bernice Giltner and Mildred Ross for the successive courses of the dinner. Stunts and music have been arranged by Miss Luzader and her assisting committee, composed of Misses Bernice Giltner, Elsie Shelley, Dorothy Everoad and Leese Worth.

Sister Marys Kitchen DINNER MENU ? Iced Watermelon Cubes * Veal Birds Creamed Peas Scalloped Potatoes Frozen Tomato Salad Cheese Straws Apricot Shortcake Half-Cups Coffee Frozen Tomato Salad One quart can tomatoes, 1 small onion, 3 sprigs parsley, 2 blades celery with leaves, 2 tablespoons sugar, 4 whole clover, 1 tablespoon granulated gelatin, 1 cup whipping cream. Simmer tomatoes, onion sliced, i celery diced, parsley, sugar and cloves for half an hour. Rub ■ through a coarse sieve and add M j cup/ boiling water. Soften gelatin in ! cold water. - Reheat tomato mixture and when boiling remove from fire and stir in gelatin. When cold and beginning to jelly fold in cream whipped and seasoned with salt and paprika. Turn into a mold and freeze in five cups of finely chipped Ice to one of salt. The mixture should not be "cranked” while freezing and should stand about four hours. Remove from mold and cut in slices. Serve on hearts of lettuce with French dressing. LUNCHEON MENU Fruit Cocktail Creamed Sweetbreads and Mushrooms on Toast Jellied Vegetable Salad Salad Rolls Maple Mousse Sponge Cake Iced Tea Maple Mousse One cup maple sirup, white 2 eggs, 1 pint -whipping cream, % teaspoon salt. Beat whites of egg until stiff and dry. Bring sirup to the boiling point and beat into eggs.AVhip cream and combine mixtures. The salt should be added to the eggs while beating. Tprn into a mold and pack in ice and saltfi using three parts ice to one of salt. Let stand three or four hours and serve. The cream should not he stirred while freezing, but will be of smoother texture if the sides of the mold are scraped with a wooden spatula while freezing. The sirup. has a tendency to settle to the bottom if no attention is given it. (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Keep Shelves Clean Keep the shelves and walls of your refrigerator clean every day and once a week clean the whole chest and air it thoroughly. Keep Space Open Keep the space under your sink' open. Do not clutter it with boxes or any scrubbing utensils. Lace Lingerie Lace lingerie is the latest whim of Paris. Petticoats, slips and slipons are made of the mo >t cobwebby rets, that are scarcely • more substantial than tulle. , Silver Fringe Wide silver fringe makes a lovely finish for the white satin sashes that are very fashionable now. Huge Gas Theft By Times Special KOKOMO, Ind., Aug. 9.—Police today are searching for the robber who stole 107 gallons of gasoline from a Standard Oil Company’s fillling station here.

Young Women of Butler University Who fire in Charge of Sorority Rush Parties for Prospective Pledges Remind Collegiate Set of Approaching Opening of School Year

: I- > ■■■ ■ - , : x v slip? mm —Photo by Baohrach. | -c , sit '

A Dumb-Bell Wife Makes Man Lord and Ruler of His Domain

But He’ll Have to Find His 'lnspiration' Elsewhere, ! By MRS. WALTER FERGUSOX A minister in Kansas is advising the young men of his congregation to marry girls who have domestic rather than intellectual tendencies. He says they will make the best wives. This is no discovery. To some men, dumb-bells have always "made the best wives. Dumb-bells are the kind that you can get easily and train without trouble. They

Good Lines mT is indeed uncommon for such graceful and elegant lines to be found on so utilitarian a garment as a flannel coat dress, but here they are. The cape is detachable and may be left at home whenever desired. The collar may be worn closed at the neck as in the photograph or opened in a V. The waistline in front occurs at the junction of the first tier of the skirt, but in the back it is only suggested by the tie belt. This outfit is very practical for fall and lends itself graceully to the addition of a fur neckpiece or a colored scarf.

CRASH DAMAGES CARS Philip Plum Injured; Forrest Monica! Under Arrest. When, autos driven by Forrest Monical, 704 Parkway Ave., and Philip Plum, 10S W. Merrill St., collided at Pennsylvania and- Merrill Si, both cars were badly damaged. Plum was takerr home injured about the back. Police charged Monical with assault and battery. Frank Williams, 654 E. TwentyFifth St., was charged with assault and battery. Officers said Qgvid Miller, 10, of 318 N. Chester Ave., was bruised when he ran from the curb into the path of Williams’ auto at New York StC and Chester Ave.

FABLES ON HEALTH Buttermilk Beneficial

_-V3ITH the coming of hot days. \j U Mr. Mann of Anytown was wont to visit soda fountains and ask for buttermilk. Few people know how important a part the use of sour milk, in any of its forms —whether buttermilk or one of the many especially prepared concoctions —plays In fighting intestinal poisonings. Lactic acid, which is the acid contained in sour milk, is a medium in which putrefactive can not thrive. So, if one can’ keep some milk germs in the ln-

have the doormat complex, and are easy to manage. They are gullible and unsuspecting and humble: they weep easily, but never answer "Back. The wife who lacks intelligence and never reads the papers and isn't interested in politics, and would not recognize an idea is she met it in the road, generally does wonderful, crochet and wouldn’t cross her husband for the world. The dumb-bell thinks that the man she has married is the nation’s matrimonial prize and hangs on his words as if he were an oracle. She never questions his decisions and harbors no opinion that does not agree with his. She loves cooking for him and meets him each night at the front door with his slippers and puts out his clothes every morning and gets his bath ready. She is the ideal wife for the man who wants housekeeper, cook, valet and audience in one, for a spouse. And she surely makes a grand mate for the dumb-bell man, but woe to the other kind who falls for her domesticity. For there are some things no man can expect from a stupid wife. She can never give her husband any intellectual assistance: she will never act as a spur to his ambitions: she will never help him along socially: she will never be a political asset to him; she will never be a congenial fireside companion, and she will never be able to give him brilliant sons and talented daughters. If you men really want a dumb bell in the house, go out and hire her; but think well before you decide to marry one.

ALICE M.CROZIER MARRIED IN OHIO “ S Couple Will Make Home in Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. John D. Crozier, 372 Ker.niore Rd., announce the marriage of their daughter, Alice M., to Robert E. Fennell, July 28 In Cleveland, Ohio. A wedding dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hamker of Cleveland followed the ceremony. The bride is a graduate of Butler university, where she was a membe- of the Zeta Tau Alpha Sorority. Si.o received her master’s degree from lowa State College, Ames, lowa, last June. Fennel, a graduate of lowa State College, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Fennell of Allerton, lowa. Mr. and Mrs. Fennell will be at home after Aug. 10 at 3715 Cypress Ave., Cleveland.

MYSTERY IN DEATH Wealthy I .umber Dealer Found Dead in Bed. By United Press CANNELTON, Ind., Aug. 9. Cause of the death of S. L. Strobe, wealthy lumber dealer, vas unsolved today. Strobe was found dead in bed at the home of Garfield Harris, where he was staying during the absence of the Harris family. Condition of the body indicated he had been dead several days. The coroner was unable to determine the cause of his death. There was no evidence of foul play. ‘ Lawn Social Aug. 14-16 Members of Holy Name parish, Beech Grove, will hold a lawn social Aug. 12 to 14 on the schools grounds. Chicken dinner will be served on the last day.

testinal tract manufacturing their belligerent lactic germs a constant enemy of intestinal poisons will be on hand. This, does not mean that the mere swallowing of a little sour milk will do the work. The good germs must be kept alive and to do this we must feed them. The foods which best aid in the propagation of these good germs include a rather free usage of milk, some cereal such as oatmeal, cooked for but ten mlnues, or a slight amount of raw starch.

THE INDIANAPOLIS*TIMES

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—Photos by Charles S. Bretzman. LEFT TO RIGHT: MISS I&ARGARET WATERS. MTSS SARSH FRAXCES DOWNS, MISS MARJORIE CHILES, MISS ELOISE LUZADER. BELOW: MISS IRMA ULRICH AND MISS HOPE CARTER.

r— | AY rush parties being given Gby the sorority girls of Buti___J ler University make the opening of the school year seem surprisingly near at hand. The above young women are termed the “rush captains’’ of their respective/sororities and they have left nothing undone to arrange the most attractive affairs for the

Pailies, Meetings and Social Activities

rr ~~i ISS EVAI.YN HOVEY, daughllVl * pr °* Mrs. Alfred R. Hovey, li _) whose marriage to Barrett Moxley Woodsmall will take place Aug. 27, was the honor guest Saturday afternoon at a prettily appointed bridge party and kitchen .shower given by Mrs. Harry C. Woodsmall, 3340 X. Meridian St. The brtde's colors, orchid and yellow, were used in the decorations and/ appointments. The gifts were presented on the dining room table for which the centerpiece was a basket of yellow and lavender garden flowers and roses. Mrs. Woodsmall was assisted by Mra. George W. Mahoney and Mrs. H. H. Woodsmall. The guests: Mesdames Byron Leach,Earl Robinson, Bon O. Aspey, Forest “Thorn, Dudley Smith, Misses Helen and Betty De Grief, Dorothy Enners, Rachel Stuart, lone BingGenevieve Berger, Mary Alice Coleman and Helen Keene. • * • The Rev. and Mrs. Edward F. Doan of Las Cruse, N. M., announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Eleanor to Dr. Frederick MaMUlan of Indianapolis, which took place Aug. 4. Dr. and Mrs. McMillan are spending several weeks at Lake Maxlnkuckee. Mrs. Doan Is visiting her Other daughter, Mrsi-Jialph M. Drybrough, 2942 Ruckle St.

Out-of-town guests who were here for the wedding of Miss Dorothy Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Thompson and George Wilfred Vestal, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. vV. Vestal, Saturday night in the First Baptist Church were Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Douglass, Mr. and Mrs. Marian Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Thompson and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Thompson of Greensburg; Miss Mary Strout of Bedford, Miss Grace Pritchard of Los Angeles, Cal.; Mrs. C. W. Cvoeschelt of Toledo and John Pobler of Miami, Fla. The wadding was set for 8:30 p. m., the Rev.. Percy James, officiating. The bride and bridegroom planned a. wadding trip to Lake Manitou returning about Sept. 1, to live at 431 N. Gray St. • • • A number of guests have been invited to dancing party on the lawn of th- home of Miss Margaret and Miss Anna Doll, 902 W. Twentyninth St., for__Saturday night honoring their house guests from Connersville, Miss Elizabeth Remington and Miss Marjorie Mettle. Mrs. F. A. Doll was to be assisting hostess. • * • Mrs. R. Harry Miller, 1301 N. Alabama St., will leave next week for Oden, Mich., where she will spgnd the rest of the summer with her brother,' Albert Hass, ahd family of Noblesville. • • • Mr. and Mrs. CL Roltare Eggleston, 2223 N. Alabama St., will return homre Sunday from a motor trip in the East. * • • Miss Martha Hays, 1301 N. Alabama St., will leave Thursday for a month in California. She will be accompanied by Miss Julia Kelley of

“rushees,” prospective pledges, who are the most Important features of the fall season to the “collegiate set." Miss Eloise Luzader, 108 S. Butler Ave.. is in charge of Alpha Delta Theta rush. • Miss Sarah Frances Downs, 3310 Central Ave., Is the Kappa Alpha Theta captain,.

New York City, who will join her here the first of the week. • • Miss Mildred Peters of Barada. Neb., la visiting her aunt, Mrs. Mag gle Rockwell, and cousin, Mrs. C. H. Wilcken, 4905 E. Xew York St. • • • The assisting hostesses for a tea Tuesday afternoon at the home of Miss Georgia and Miss Grace Alexander, 1516 N. Pennnsylvania St., given by the Indianapolis League "t Women Vqters, honoring Mrs. William Carey Teasdale of New York, will be Mrs. David Lurvey, Mrs. Jaunes L. Gavin, Miss Genevieve Piekerell and Miss Eloise Gall. i Mrs. W. O. Bates is general chairman for the affair. • • The Caroline Scott Harrison chapter of D. A. R. will give the second series of indoor picnics on Wednesday at 12:30 at the chapter house, 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Every member is invited to come with one dish of food for the luncheon. • • • The 50-50 Campaign Club will meet with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Perkins. 5457 Julian Ave., Friday night. Mrs. Perkins is arranging the program, • • • Mrs. Ernest Suess and Miss Noreert Dundson will entertain Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Suess, 628 Rural St., for Miss Bernice Harrington, whose marriage

Herron Art Institute Notes

An exhibition of paintings, owned in Indianapolis and vicinity is displayed in galleries X and XI. Lithographs from the permanent collection are in gallery 11. Loan collection of furniture, lent by Miss Sarah Niblack -and Miss Eliza M. Niblack, gallery 111. Gallery I has been rearranged. Director J. Arthur Mac Lean and his family have motored to Michigan. where ttrey will spend the month of August. Miss Dorothy Blair, assistant dl rector, has returned from several weeks spent at Cleveland and Lake Chautauqua. She spent some time at the Cleveland Museum of Art in special research work. Miss Anna Basselman, curator of paintings is spending several weeks at Castlne, Me. En ruote she will visit the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Miss Grace Speer, registrar, has returned from Winona Lake, where

Shocking By Times Special KOKOMO. Ind., Aug. 9.—Police now are watching the new swimming pool in the city park. Young men have been going swimming clad only in trunks. Shocking, says Hugh Carrothers, president of the park board.

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Miss Marjorie Chiles, 1157 W. Thirty-Fifth St., is the Pi Beta Phi captain. Miss Margaret Waters, 20 Bosart. Ave., handles the affairs for Delta Delta Delta. % Miss Hope Carter, 329 E. Thirtieth St., is the Delta Zeta captain and Miss Irma Ulrich, 3519 Winthrop. Kappa Kappa Gamma.

to William Farrell Lannon will take place Aug. 26 In the SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. • • Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wynne, 1150 Congress Ave., and Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Bressler, 1812 Dexter Ave., and son Thomas, have returned from a motor trip to thlcago, Detroit and Canada. • • • A party consisting Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Clapp, 2433 N. Delaware St.; Mrs. Anna M. Wilson, 914 Ashland Ave.; Mrs. Elnore Pasquire, 1535 Pellefontalne St.; Mrs. Ella Dunning, 120 W. Twenty-sixth St.; Mrs. Cora Marlowe, 1921 Park Ave.; Mrs. Otis McCracken, 3057 College Ave.; Mrs. Anna Stedfeldt, 2-fW. Twenty-fourth St.; Miss Cora Ryan, and Miss Florence Roberts, 116>4 W. Thirtieth Str, left Saturday for Boston, Mass., where they will visit for a month. • • • The George H. Chapman, W. R. C. No. 10, will hold a joint memorial service, with the George H. Chapman G. A. R. Post No. 29, Tuesday afternoon in the G. A. R. Home, 512 N. Illinois St. • • • The GooJl Will Club will entertain with eucher and lotto Monday afternoon In St. Joseph's Hall, 615 W. Morris St. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Murray Dalman, 3043 N. Delaware St., and family returned Saturday from a two weeks’ visit. In Ft. Wayne.

sjje studied at the summer school of the John Herron Art Institute. The summer school of the John Herron Art Institute completed its six weeks session on Aug. 2. The enrollment of 117 was an encouraging one. W.C.T.U. Notes] Sarah A. Swain Union will meet with Mrs. H. G. Alexander, 1245 Churchman Ave., all day Tuesdaybeginning at 10:30 a. m. A box lunch Will be served aif noon. Mrs. E. H. Schmidt will talk on "Law Enforcement”; Mrs. Will Jenkins will lead the devotions, and election of officers will begin at 2 p. m. _ • • • Artman Y. P. B. will meet on Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Laura Gilliland, Beech Grove. Francis Willard Union will meet at the home of Mrs. E. A. Kemp, 709 W. Thirty-second St. Tuesday afternoon. • • • Zeralda Wallace Union will hold an all day picnic Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Rye Askem, Stop 6, Honey Bee Line. All unidns are invited. * * * Broad Ripple Union will meet Wednesday at the Broad Ripple M. E. Church at 2 p. m.

What If Wives Struck for Evidence of Love?

Just what would .happen, I wonder, if, some day, the many wives who have become hardly more than housekeepers to their husbands, would rise up in revolt and would proclaim:

C v c lsmgle LETTER FROM SALLY ATHER- . TOX TO BEATRICE SUMMERS. COXTIXUED. But there’s some more mixup about it that I don’t just understand, and his highness, Gentleman Jack, imagines he has been very much abused. He’s such a boy, Bee, that I help liking him, although all the while I feel like boxing his ears. He ought to have a woman like me to tell him where he would get off. I rather imagine that friend of his, who was here at the wedding, Sydney Carton, does this very often. By the way, Mr. Sydney didn’t care for me a bit. He seemed to feel that I w r as vamping poor little Jackie boy. Oh, well, one more person who doesn’t care for me doesn’t matter much. I presume I am a woman with the greatest number of haters in her train that any one knows, and I rather like them. They amuse me. x

Yesterday at luncheon I went to a rather smart place that is much patronized by society women. As usual, I got a table that was right in the middle of a lot of cacklers. They, one and all, were talking about Mr. Prescott and his going on with that moving picture actress, Paula Perler. It,seems he had had some sort of affair with her before he was married, and they seemed to think it was perfectly terrible that he should stay here and escort Paula Perler at your wedding when his wife had gone to her sick father. Os course. I being one of that kind of people who never think like any one else, was rather tickled at the whole affair. I coulii just understand how that pretty little French woman enjoyed coming back here where it seems she had been pilloried by all the society women in town, and politely, although metaphorically, telling them to go to. I don’t think it would hurt Leslie very much. She has a, sense of humor. Between you and me, I imagine that she and Mrs. Prescott have had a row, and that her father’s illness came as a providential Interruption to what might have been a quite serious quarrel. As it is, I am sure they have not made up, for Mr. Prescott has not dictated any letters to his wife. Don’t looked shocked —the modern man always dictates his letters to his wife. Leslie's friend, Ruth Ellington, too, is out of the city. I heard one of these women that I was telling you about say to another that she had gone to Xew York to meet perhaps the most eligible man that had ever been In Albany. She Is going to marry millions, my dear. She’s another one of the people who seem to think that I am going to vamp poor Mr. Prescott. If all these people don't stop wishing it on me, perhaps I'll have to do it. The power of thought, you know, Bee—the power of thought. • Mr. Prescott is wandering around this office like a lost soul. If we could only make a man understand how dependent he is upon his wife after he has lived with her for a few years, I think we wouldn't have as many divorces. Well, I guess I’ve written you enough to make you worry about me and my Ideas. Every time I write you, Bee, I wonder why you love me. Don’t you stop It, dear, for all the friends you have In the world, I would be the best. SALLY. (Copyright, 1924, XEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: Letter from John Alden Prescott to Sydney Carton.

SUBSTATIONS TO MOVE PostofHce Will Erect New Building at Thirty-Second and Illinois. Two substations of the Indianapolis postofflce will be moved. Postmaster Robert H. Bryson has announced. Anew building for Station A, Thirtieth and Illinois Sts., will be erected at Thirty-Second and Illinois Sts. The station at Forty-Second St. and College Ave. will be shoved to College, Just north of Forty-Second. Bryson said the change, recommended by a postofflce inspector from Washington, will mean a saving of from SB,OOO to SIO,OOO annually. Anew substation will be ppened In Brightwood within sixty days, according to Bryson, and the Postofflce Department is asking for bids on sub-offices in Haughville and Broad Ripple.

GOOD MANNERS Godparents For Child Bi EFORE setting tbo date for the christening, the godu__J mothers (two for a girl and one for a boy) and the godfathers (two for a boy and one for a girl) have, of course, already been chosen. i Fall Suits Three-piece suits for fall have very long coats that may be worn a separate coat as well. Gleaning Reed Clean reed and willow baskets by rubbing with a stiff brush.

“We are the women you married. We still want to be loved, and flattered and a<ynired. If we have changed, if some of the charm that made you fall in love with us is gone, il is because you have crushed it out by indifference. “Day after day we care for your house and your children. We 'see that you"have what you desire. We drudge, drudge, drudge. “Then you come, ‘worn out’ by your day’s labor. Still we work for you. When you feel the need of recreation you take it. “But what about us? We must await your pleasure. You are the ones who work, whose wishes must be consulted. “Think you that we do not work, that we are not tired, that we need no recreation? “We work, too. Our ‘pay’ must* come from love, and tenderness and thoughtfulness. “For years we have gone unpaid. Now we strike. When our pay is forthcoming we shall return to our duties. “Those are our terms.” What would happen, I wonder.

One of Them, My Dear Martha Lee: I am 27. My husband is 35. We have been married more than seven years and have a darling boy 4 years old. My husband and I spend almost every evening at home. Lots ot times I would like to .go plaees. but he says so many times that when he works eight hours a day he wants to stay home. But he al? ways is ready to go to the ball game or poolroom, or fishing, on Saturday afternoon or Sunday. He never stops to real :;e I have worked for him and the boy all week. If I go to a show he thinks I go for spite. I go because I seek a change, because my husband fails to give me any attention. What do you think of a man who has no desire to go to church? Before we were married, he always went with me. Sometimes Ithink I am happy: I try so hard to be. But my conscience keeps telling me my child and I are neglected, that my child deserves the right teaching and inspiration from his daddy. I feel as if all he cares for me is just to keep house for him. All I want la for him to consider my feelings and help me teach and set the right example before our boy. A DISCOURAGED WIFE. If your husband were dissatisfied with working conditions, probably %ie would strike. Why should you not do the same thing, if you are dissatisfied? Let him get his own meals, mend his own shirts, darn his own stockings for a while. Tell him that you are willing to do your part to make your home happy, but that you expect him to do his. as well. His part means more han just .providing the necessities, just as yours means more than keeping house. Let him have his ball games and pool games. But make It a “fiftyfifty” proposition, so that he takes you out occasionally, too. " Not Flirting Dear Miss Lee: While on a camping trp we met a crowd of fine fellows, but they have not asked us for any dates since. We had been in the habit of going to a nearby show Now these boys are coming there. If we continue to go to this show, do you think they will think we are running after them? We only go there for the pictures, and not to flirt and have dates with them. Will it be all right to continue to go. although the boys are there? TROUBLED TRIO. If you conduct yourselves as you should, I don’t know why these boys should suspect you of “flirting” with them, or why you should change your plans just because they happen to attend the same show.

Household Suggestions Red Popular If you don’t wear red you aren’t fashionable these days. Entire gowns of red are even more popular than trimmings of red on black or white. Ottoman Silk ottoman is used to make very lovely coats for fall that are banded with luxurious furs. Chiffon Embroidered chiffon' is used to trim cloth and silk dresses and to give Just enough decoration. Colored Hats Brilliantly colored hats with shiny fruit are very much liked to give pep to black or dark blue hats. Lip Rouge The latest reporc from Paris is that women are abandoning all make-up except brilliant rouge for the Ups. Floppy Hats The very large droopy, floppy hat is very smart in Paris as weU as ItNew York and is usually worn with the very short frock. Cape Backs Cape backs and tier panels feature the new fur coats that are ready for the August sales.

~ jyjf .ft At fiie first sign of skin trouble apply Resinol That patch of eruption is not necessarily a serious matter! Even in severe, well-established cases of eczema, ringworm or similar affection*, Resinol Ointment and Resinof Soap usually relieve the itching at once and quickly overcome the trouble completely. *How much more, then, can this simple, inexpensive treatment be relied on to dispel skin troubles in their earlier stages. Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment am sold bp sit druggists. Bat samples of each- irea wriaa te Scat. JrS, Rasinol, Baltimore, Md.