Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 178, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 December 1924 — Page 6
6
PURDUE IS MECCA FOR SCIENTISTS Indiana Academy Opens Annual Session, By Tints Special LAFAYETTE, Ind.. Dec. 4. Prominent scientists from over the United States were on the program for the fortieth annual meeting of the Indiana Academy of Science opening a three-day session tonight at Purdue University. General business will be transacted Friday morning. President C. C. Deam. State forester of Bluffton, will speak. Sectional meetings, devoted to botany. chemistry, mathematics. physics. geology, geography and zoology will be held Friday afternoon. The annual dinner will be at 6:30 Friday night in the Memorial Union Bldg. Dr. W. A. Xoves. director of the Department of Chemistry at the University of Illinois will give the annual lecture on the subject, "Positive and Negative Valences; an Historic Account of the Development of Valence.” A feature of the program is to be a dinner given by the botanists of the State in honor of Dean Stanley Coulter and Dr. J. C. Arthur, both of Purdue. Friday noon. Prof. William Trelease, of the University of Illinois and Dr. John M. Coulter of the University of Chicago, and other botanists of national repute will attend. Lemon Helpful A teaspoon of lemon juice in a cup of hot water often relieves a bilious headache. Effective Means of Reducing Fat Here is sn extrar-rdimirv method of reducing weight—extraordinary because no starvation diets or violent *"i--riie3 are neeessary. Mavmnla Prescription Tablets are made exactly in acco.-iiaee with the famous Marmola Prescription. They reduce you steadily and easily with no ill effects. Procure them from your druggist at "!i dollar f r a lex or send price direct to the Marmots Company, General Motors Building, Pc troit. Mich <>nce.v,u start taking *hose tablets and losing your fs. te-ss, you will be happy gain.—Advertisement.
LEA & PERRINS' SAUCE Make* Fish taste better
Only for Friday
Radio pans—Att eniion! Our new Ibidio Department is new open. \V<> eas -apply invthing from a terminal screw to a complete receiving set. IK-re ~r<- two >j,. rials for Friday and Saturday only $4 Amplifier Tubes . . $0,48 201-A. quarter ampere amplifier tube, regular price 54 Jr Special Friday and Saturday ouly CEB 50c Citizens Radio Call Book Contains list of American and foreign broadcast big stations, charts maps, construction and trouble finding data and other very useful and valuable i information. Special Friday and a fiT _ Saturday ** “
Ash Tray With Glass Inserts Heavy white mria! bodv. blue tinted and gray flaiah. Four in oh re in diameter over ail. Pretty blue and orange colored giaee Inserts. Special Frl- CQ„ day and Saturday only DUC
40-Watt Bulbs
Don't •train your aye* aider dim lamps when the prim of uesr ones Is so low These are absolutely firsts and made under limner of the Genera! Electric Company. Guaranteed in .mery iwepcct. Xo phone or C. O. D. • irder*. Spe-'al Friday and Saturday , only, each—17c
Carton of five. upe.-ial Ort Friday and Saturday ....uUC
Two-Way Plugs
Makes two outlets out of one. Permits use of two table lamps or from one socket table and floor lamp, w aiher and electric iron, or a table appliance and an overhead bulb. Made of a high-grade heat resisting compound. Sp-cial j Friday and Qs Saturday only.. Jt C
VflllliP‘flli¥ KaRDWARE co*J Si IVs u 0U I 120-24 E. Wash. St.
QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS
IRS. S. C. BODNER. 54G1 Carrollton Ave., and Mrs. A. A. Fairbanks entertained Thursday afternoon with a luncheon and bridge shower for their sister, Miss Ruth Brown whose marriage to Arch Mebron of Wheeling, W. Va., will take place Dec. 2S. Covers were laid for twetny-one. Decorations were chrysanthemums in the bridal colors, pink, white and orchid, in silver vases tied with J tulle ribbons. Shower gifts were presented in a large silver basket tied with orchid and pink ribbons. Favors were tiny gold slippers filled with rice and name cards in bridal design. The hostesses were assisted by Mrs. Bailey Brown, mother of the bride-elect. • • • A Christmas meeting of the Caro- * line Scott Harrison chapter of lh A. R. was held Thursday afternoon at the chapter house, 524 X. Pennsylvania St. Dr. F. S. C. Wicks spoke j on the “Spirit of Christmas’’ and the : chapter quartette sang a program , of Christmas songs. Mrs. Harold It. Cunning was in charge of the program and Mrs. F. Ellis Hunter was general chairman. • • * Gamma chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will entertain from 3 to 6 Sunday afternoon wiih an informal tea for alumnae members at I the chapter house, 215 S. Butler Ave. : • * • An Informal tea followed the meetlr.g of the Seventh District Council of the American Legion Auxiliary, Thursday afternoon, at the Polly Prlmm, at which Mrs. O. I>. j Oliphant, national president was ] honor guest. Mrs. James A. Drain of Washington, wife of th legion national commander. Mrs. Dorothy Harper of Hawaii, treasurer. Miss ! Bess Wetherholt, secretary: Miss' Hazel Workman, were also honor guests. Hostesses were the executive coin mittee. Mesdames 11. Nathan Swaim, j Fae Xisley. Cathryn Sutter, Hilaries ! T. Butler, Arthur Waiters. John j Paul Ragsdale, B. F. Whitaker and ' Miss Jean Coffin. Plans were made for the distribution of baskets among f rnilies of needy ex service men and dis ild" 1 veterans in the hospitals Reports were made on the welfare work. Mrs. Oliphant was honor guest Wednesday at a tea given by Mrs. Dwight E. Aultman at Ft. Benjamin I larrtson. . . . Mrs. W Carleton Best, formerly Miss Irrna Korn, < ntertain< i : Wednesday at tiie home of b*-r mother. Mrs. J. W. Knm, if 2 7 Broadway, with a luncheon bridge ~f
Lawoc Window Refrigerators m jjp-* I T!m La woo Window lie fri in I scientifically ventilated, alio win? the : eool. fre#*h, outdoor air to eireulato o>nIlia • v around the foods Keeps them fretth and wholesome for the maximum I .ffiirth of time. Soon pays for ltßeli by j Bavin* coat of ice and eliminating t-poil i a*e. Does not interfere with cleaning I the window. 24 *>* in**h*s lon*. 1i \ • inches deep and 12 \ wide M.-tde of heavy ARMCO rust-r aiating:’ metal. } coated on the outaide with aluminum | bronze and llnlshe*! inside with thr-e 1 "oat of white fn jrx /-> amel, baked on 9pe- o**l (IQ rial Friday and Satj unlay only v’v %J \J | Heavy Rapid Vacuum ?IS2 I Washer jury You Ret every movement. 8 L inohes in diameter, !{L melies high with a 3-toot handle. Made of heavy bright tin. No solder usi-d in its con ana •truetton. Can be dried / on stove. Special Friday M am* and Saturday’ only § § V, O -rctnl.er 7th Is Golden liul*‘ Hnnday. Do your bit to help the orphans of iiitNear Hast.
Appointed jJ
—Fiioto by Dexheimer. MRS ART RPR R. ROBINSON Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson, 5533 E. Washington St., has been appointed department legislative chairman of the Indiana American Legion Auxiliary.
eight tables Kho was assisted by Mrs. Arthur A. Brown. • • • At a tea given Wednesday after--1 noon hy Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, ie.35 X'. Pennsylvania St , for Mrs j Richard Gebhardt of Chicago and j her hostess, Mrs. Booth Tarkington, ] ossisting hostesses were Mesdaines | Albert J. Beveridge. Charles E. j Coffin. Eli Lilly, Arthur V. Brown I land Miss luise Kiefer. Purdue women will have a busi- : ti-ss meeting Saturday .afternoon in , the ib-rro!] Art Institute. • * * Members f the board of directors of the Marion County chapter of Amer.e.an \\ Midlp-rs will be en , tert.une.i I'-id.iy ><• ’ :n aeon at tti - honi" of Mrs J. C. Kybolt, 170 X i Talbott Ave. , . . A mu leal program has been arranged f r the Christmas party to t- giver- i.v the Indiana mil* of the j Women’s Overseas league Saturday 'night at the Polly Prlmm tearoom. The citric,. Hansford chapter of <i E S will have a Christmas baler Kri ty i* *'.•- auditorium 'f the i aivin W Prat her uiie Temple. ' ‘..ge Ave and E .rt> Se, i rid St Mrs Charles \ S* liars is general ■ hairtoan Mrs. John Lees is in ■ 'targe . f r!,e dime-r to bo served fti.’iM p m. • • • i Joseph R. Gordon W R. C., No. 13, will meet f, r annual election of ,tli. e : s F, i’day at rite G. A. R. Home, 712 X Illinois Si. Annual “bean” • (inner will be served Saturday noon. Women of S" Catherine's parish have . omplete l arrangements for a .rd pa v Thursday night in the ball. Snelby and Tabor -bis The Sigma Phi Kappa met V.'edr e.• .-e:r.g ft? tin* homo Os MB- Elsa Vahle. The T 1 arsda; Lyceum Club rele- • '.rated t la- ieth anniversary Ti;.i: -'ey ifte:- at a meeting at .t :e home if Mi I. J. Orr. 3-7,43 N i I'ennsyivatiia St Mrs M. M Kernels read it history of the club’s prog- , ss an l each member brought a picture of herself taken twenty years ; ago. Mrs M E Woolf read a paper on ‘"My Cai let, of Memories,” by Kato : I >ou gt:, . Wiggins. | The rooms were prettily decorated !w;:h I'hrys.iri!hemuins and ferns. CLUB TO FETE CHILDREN Lions Organization Will Present Christ mas Programs. Christmas programs will be given by rile Lions Club at 'he day nursery arid for detention home inmates Program will also be given at the <>unty [xior farm. At the • lull luncheon Wednesday. E O. Suet hen. president Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs, was indorsed as candidate for district governor of club. The Rev. j George W. Allison spoke on “The Duties of u Chaplain in the Army." NEAR EAST GETS BOOST Ed .Jim kson to Hash Message on Silent Orator. The motograph on Merchants Heat | and Light Company Bldg, will Hash ; this message tonight in the interest nf Near East ft lief: "Thousan Is of Bible land orphans 'are depending on your belief in the Golden Rule. Sunday is Golden Rule day. Your sacrificial gift to Near East relief on that days means life and hope for hungry tots.—Ed Jackson.”
The sensation of the drug trade is I Aspironal, tiie two-minute cold and 1 cough reliever, authoritatively guaranteed by the laboratories: tested, 1 approved arid most enthusiastically ; endorsed by the highest authorities, ; and proclaimed by the people as ten [ times as quick and effective as whiskey, rock and rye, or any other cold and cough remedy thej have ever I tried. All drug stores are supplied with the wonderful elixir, sc all you have ! to do is to step into the nearest drug i store, hand the clerk half a dollar for a bottle of Aspironal and tell [ him to serve you two teaspoonfuls, j With your watch in your hand,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Christmas Candies
Do you want to know how to make them at home? From caramels and fudge to bonbons and cream candies —they are all in the bulletin on Candy Making at Home, prepared by our Washington Bureau for the holiday and party season. Full
CANDY EDITOR, Washington Bureau The Indianapolis Times, 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the Candy Bulletin and enclose herewith five cents in loose postage stamps for same: Name Street and number or rural route City State I am a reader of THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Library Gives Latest Christmas Ideas, Corner of the public library, where ■ the candy books are to be found, ! will soon be a bvsy place Christmas j candy makers always want new ldeaz for their Ghristinas l-oxes. Some of the library books on candy making, all full of Ideas for d>licious Christmas sweets, art) listed below: “Bon-Bons and Simple Sugar Sweets," by Thorpe; “Candles and Bon-Bons,” by Nell; "Our Candy Secrets," by Van Arsdale: “Candy Cook 80-ik, ’ by Bradley; “Home Candy Making,” by Mrs. Borer. "Prune Curtsey’s Book of Candy; Making." by Glover. Library patrons find the follow ing cook books very helpful, too, with chapters on Candy lur king; “Marion Harlands Complete C->uk B----k; "Cook Book by i-.-oar of the, Waldorf"; “Cooke’s Twentieth (Vn tury Cook Book"; '’Century Cook iBook." by A ron!-!, and "Book Cook :ng School '..ok Book," l,y Farmer. jW. D. C. MOTHERS MEET ! Plans Made for Christinas Party to It*- (ilveu Dec. 30. Members of the Mothers Round Table of the Woman’s ! irtnient | Club, met Thur-Muy iftet no*in to ' discuss "Christmas Gif's and | Gratitude.” Mrs. R P Wilson chilli j man. presid’ and He* discussion ,centered about the }::■■ clems of I puron*s at Christmas t.tne. i The following Cot. :- - w.as ,'tj’ :t • i.ted for a Chi’ ro.i.s i ■ to !••• , given fiec 3'i, with. :!-• 11- -tii*’ and Education Section.. Mrs I'r ink H St re; vh,'off. chairman, itid M< ! ' ::.”s i Uwrtim-f G. (rr. 'is--a: Rns.irt F M. Donaldson, 11 L. Patrick. , ( 'l.i retire I ‘ark. DON’T SEAL PARCELS Postmaster Givi's Warning on Clirtstmajs Mall. ! Postmaster Robert 11 Bryson to [day called attention to the regulation vvhJeh prol..bb •• si-allti... sours b i • lass mall. Christmas parcels sent I under the pare*-! post rate fall In [this class. <'.ire must t-e taken n • to |-1 - -e 1 'hrlstmas stickers such as “ D • Not Open Until Christmas” in sue; a manner as to seal the wrapper. 1 try son sal-1 The only time postal regulations permit sealing -if fourth - i.is- nnl : ter is in the case of re put a'- • firms which an- given special permits In , such cases the firms must, use labels ; conforming “trirtly to a special post [office regulation. (’Hit I STM \S CANDY Pecan Marguerites One oup rolled light brown sugar. ,2 eggs, 1 table-poon incited butter, , G. cup flour, ti.’ispoon baking - powder. 1 cup broken pecan merits, few grains salt, L teaspoon vanilla. Combine sugar, melted butter atr-1 yolks of eggs beaten until thick and lemon colored. Mix and sift Hour with salt and baking powder and add wl h nuts to first mixture. Add whites of eggs heated until stilT and dry with vanilla Fold whites Into mixture. Drop from a teaspoon on to a buttered and floured cookie sheet and bake 15 minutes In a mod erato oven. ELKS WILL HONOR DEAD Services to Be Held Sunday at English’s. The forty-seeond annual Elks' memorial service will he. held Sunday at 7 p. m. at English's Theater. Tho service will bn in memory of twenty seven Elks who died last year and 441 who have died during tiie last fortv two years. Archibald M. Hall, esteemed lecturing knight of Indianapolis Lodge No. 13, will speak. The service will be public.
take the drink at one swallow and call for your money back in two minutes if you cannot feel the distressing symptoms of your cold fading away like a dream, within the time limit. Don’t be bashful, for all druggists invite you and expect you to try it. Everybody’s doing it. Take tiie remainder of the bottle home to your wife and children, for Aspironal is by far the safest and most effective, the easiest to takeand the most agreeable cold and cough remedy for children as well as adults. Quickest relief for catarrhal croup and children’s choking up at night.—Advertisement.
directions for many dozens of kinds of candies, plainly written so that they can be easily followed aro a feature of this bulletin All you home candy makers will want it. Fill out the coupon below and mall as directed:
c in e 9 tingle BETTER FROM EE.SETE PRESCOTT TO JOHN ALDEN PRESCOTT, CONTINUED. Jack, you have often wondered who gave Ruth the money to start ; that lingerie shop. Don’t you re- J member that at one time you ac | cused her of keeping back some of i the money that belonged to Harry Ellington's creditors when he left | her? Do you remember when you ■ f-mnd her taking the roll of hills ; from my wall safe and the quarrel ; that you had? I’art of that money was to oe paid for the shop, and that money came from tho sale of some of those pearls. 1 got more than I expected for them, Jack. I only wanted enough to pay your debt for which Harry j Ellington ha-i made you liable. 1 hate to bring it ail up again, j Jack. I have wanted to tell you j a bout It ever since you found out I that the pearls were eal. But at i first I had to keep silent for both Ruth Burke's and Karl Whitney's sake and after you had made such a 1 fuss about it all. 1 was afraid, afraid, [Jack, of you, my husband. t knew that In a way, the fact ; that I have had a business -even a *■:><■’■■ *sful business without your i I knowledge- will hurt your pride very much. I have heard you say ’ many times when speaking of Sally Atherton's business efficiency that you were sure 1 had none and that 1 r < man want** i h;s wife to have any ["lf x man's wife made him happy and kept tin- horn- a pleasant place ■in which to live that was all that [was nec--ss.tr y.” Jack, T never Intended to bi Into this but I found that Ruth win so up ag linst it and I kn-w tii.it we could ) very si in a shop -if the kind in which we have provc-l r-ur - - Sr-ful. if W- had .'1 little m.-fP-V, wh.-ii [ found m vs* If unexpectedly ii; possession of six thousand dollars, inipub i v.-ly I hand nr’ t together w*> started the shop. <>f fours-. I couldn’t tell you about it as long as you didn't know about Mi-- pi’irls, and when you did find it ih- at th--:n you w--re .so hurt and angry and your pride *■-tried t-urt- i so deeply in the hast h— m ,-- I ha-1 kept l':--m y< u that secret, 1 ( oiii-i r.o* tell you this oth-r one. Ever sine.- Ruth married 1 have ’U trying to get up -murage i enough to explain the whole thing to you. but you will remember that when you Were here at the time of fa Mr r •*> death wli.it a terrible time we hod I vet- Karl and Alice, end this. [ -oupled with my great grief, and my i anxiety for my mother, made me fe*-] that I could not add io If nn oth-r t:Jsun-ierstnn-iitu with you. Ruth and 1 have t.* 1k• • 1 it. over many times and i know th.it p* r j haps she would have had the courage to do it, but 1 Just didn't. That's 1 all. Each day 1 was hoping and praying that I could he brave enough to write it In a letter, when yesterday < I had a very misty note from your mother saying that Priscilla R 1 adford hud found out that I owned half th<* shop or at least she under stood that 1 did. She. your mother, said she was "riling to tun for confirmation be hue sh- told you. 1 hope sh-- hasn't t' -l-l you y* t. 1 I l .'-' 1 - . 1324. NEA Service*, Tnc.l Nl- VI rhis letter continued. HOSPITAL GETS GIFT Riley Institution Presented $2,000 in Memory of -I. E. Roberts. Announcement of a $2,000 gift to 'ho Riley Hospital by Indianapolis j foundation has been made by the hospital executive committee. Gift will be user] t () equip the orthopedic j brace shop of the institution. The [ -,'ifi is In memory of James E. [ Roberts. Establishment of a hronchoscopic clinic, at the hospital, first in the Middle West, has been authorized, after an emergency operation was performed Verna Louise Jones, 6. Frankfort, In which seven fragments "fa peanut were removed from her light lung. A similar operation was performed with a bronchoscope on a Cambridge City girl for removal of a piece of bone In her throat. SECOMD VICTIM DIES Daughter Succumbs Despite Heroism of Mother. fly Times ftp mini HUNTINGTON, Tnd., Dec. 4. Miss Bello Hummell. 35, was dead today, the secon dvictim of an oil explosion that cost tho life of her mother, Mrs. Conrad Hummell, 65, Wednesday. I Miss Hummell attempted to start ! a fire with the kerosene, which ex- | ploded setting her dress on fire. Her mother rushed to her aid, rollerl her in the snow and then, with her own clothing afire, went back to the house to telephone for aid She died severad hours afterward. Eli Gephart. a farm hand, also was badly burned in aiding the two women. Condition SHU Serious Earl Millender, 1236 N. Holmes Ave., and Harry Van Pelt, 324 Milburn St., city fireman, are still in serious conditions from injuries received Tuesday when the fire truck on which they were riding turned over at Sixteenth and Meridian Sts. after colliding with a machine driven by J. L. Martz, Charlottesville, Ind. Three other firemen who were Injured in the crash are Improving,
Matched
i- . - ——
Three girls in the American embassy in Berlin are engaged to British officers. Here is one couple Miss Margaret Neil and Capt. Sydney Daw of His Majesty’s troops.
THRONG GREETS ENVOY Now Russian Ambassador to France Arrives in Paris. 1 Si U 1 niti I f'r, a* PARIS, Dee, 4—The Gare de I.'Est rang with the chorus of the "Internationale’’ today as Krassin, new Russian ambassador, i arrived and was greeted by a throng I that numliered fully 10,000. Simultaneously, in the home of a communist, a short distance away, tho police captured Jacques Sadoul. a former army captain under sentence of death for desertion in warj time. Sadoul tied to Russia and ro- [ turned here after recognition of the i soviet government. NO CURE; TAKES LIFE Asthma Given as Motive for La j Porte Suicide. nj/ Timm Sprrinl i LA P'iRTE. Ind.. Dec. 4.—L00 ! (T'hlupacek, 02, when told that his 1 reonv.-ry from chronic asthma was j hopeless, went to his bum and i age j himself. He had been un- j ibie to sleep for three months. A wliiow five children and eleven grandchildren survive Suspects Exonerated William Wilkinson, 334 E. Georgia St . and Ed.-ar Sharp. ‘.’*26 E. Georgia St . wh > w >■: *• arrested in investigation of *he theft "fa satchel con- \ taining ffe.'O from Mrs. Stella Colenun, 111 E. Eighteenth St., at Twenty First K*. and College Ave., X-iv is, had nothing to do with the >bbery and were d.ischarged in city court, it was made kit wn today. ltatidit Stripe* ts Held Two col- red bandit suspects were | art ested bv police early today at liliiiCs and Walnut Sts. Sergeant Bartlett, stilt* s he found an autoir.i ■ pistol In the j*kot of one. DRINK HER WHEN KIDNEYS HURT 1011 When you wake up with backache and dull misery in the kidney region it may mean > u have been eating so. -is which i reate adds, says a. well known authority. An excess of such ye’ s overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the hood and they become sort of paralyzed and Soggy When your kidneys get slug- ; gNh and C-g you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels, removing all the body’s urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headnehdizzy spells: your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is ivad you have rheumatic i twinges. Hither consult 0 good, reliable phvisicsan at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts: take 1 taidespoonful in a glass j of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help clean and Htlmluiato sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids In the system, so they no longer irritate, thus often relieving bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive, can not . injure and makes a delightful, offer- | veseent. lithia-water drink. Drink : lots of soft water. By all means i have your physician examine your kidneys at least twice a year.—Advertisement.
Newton Collins
That Kidney Trouble, Take It in Time
“I have been taking Dr. fierce’s Anuric (anti-urlc acid) Tablets and think they are the greatest medicine in tlie world for kidney trouble and backache. 1 have no pains at all any more. I believe 1 would r>e dead by now if I had not taken An-uric.” —Newton Collins, Rego, Ind. Realizing the great need for an effective home remedy to correct kidney troubles In their early stages. Dr. Pierce put his staff of physicians and chemists at the Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo, X. Y., to work on the problem. In time they worked out this ideal formula, which Is called “An-uric." because by strengthening the eliminative action of the kidneys, it works to free the sufferer from the evil effects of uric acid. Buy An-urlc of your neighborhood druggist, or send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for trial package.—Advertisement.
Moderns Use Speech as Necessity, Not A
“Silent Jack” tvants to knoAY hotv to develop conversational ability. “Tell him he just has to learn how to talk,” one clever young man of my acquaintanceship suggested. ‘‘All you need to keep a conversation—if it can ho- called that—going these
days is a few ‘wise, cracks.’ ” i Truly, sometimes it seems as if it is as my friend says. But if ho [ listens attentively, and thinkingly, [ he will find that behind these “wise j cracks" of the younger generation I is an insight into a character and a knowlerge of the world’s affairs greater than that his ancestors had in the days when conversation was an art. In those days, conversation was the* chief means of entertainment. Time was taken to develop nice phrases. Epigrams were as common then as "wise cracks” are now. The motion picture, the radio and the dance hall have conspired to take away the artistry of conversation, by providing other entertainment. In our rush after material things, too often we use speech only as necessity. Our forefathers appreci- - ated the fact that it was a source, j of beauty and too. Jack’s Deficiency My Dear Miss L*e Can you please tell I me how I can a- velop the ability to herd a.a i;tP-r--!-tiny conversation 5 Books --n et’quett-- are --f no value. Dances and so forth only bra.? out more plainly my inability to converse. What would you advise m to do? SILENT JACK. Read newspapers and magazines, so that you will be “up" on current events. Acquire enough knowledge of such subjects as sports, plays, dances, etc., to carry on “light” conversations. and of current happenings. books, etc., for more serious talks. Talk about the things In which *he person to whom you are talking is interested. Get hint started, and | you won’t have to worry about what [to say. Part of being a good conversationalist consists In being a good listener. Married Sixty-Eight Years 1 By Times Special ELKHART. Ind., Dec. 4.—Wash-
one ’C* oz U every baking purpos‘d K SUNDAY EXCURSION RATES —Via— I Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Cos. Every Sunday During December SI.OO tor the round trip will be charged between all Stations on this Company’s Lines in Indiana where the regular oneway fare is $1.50 or less: To Knightstown, Cambridge City, Newcastle, Lebanon, Frankfort, Crawfordsville, Greencastle, Martinsville and intermediate points. Ife $1.50 for the round trip will be charged between all Stations on this Company's Lines in Indiana where the regular one- E way fare is more than $1.50: To Richmond, Frankfort, B Lafayette, Brazil, Terre Haute, Sullivan, Clinton. a Tickets will be good going on all regular trains on date of sale. I Tickets will be good returning on all regular trains on date of sale, g
THURSDAY, DEC. 4, 1924
-Martha Lee Says-
! ington T)s Haven, 89, and his wife, ; 87, celebrated their sixty-eighth wed- ! ding anniversary today. - ■
Safe Way-Free If Not Satisfied This remarkable new discovery wi!l positively clear and whiten your skin—almost overnight! And unless you are amazed and delighted with the result it will cost you absolutely nothing—yoffiPlfc money will be gladly refunded. Sa'lownes tJF rnuddiness, tan, freckles, redness, ness, pimples and blackheads all vanish. Make this test tonight. Right before bedtime smooth some of this coo!, fragrant creme on your skin. Tomorrow morning notice how muddiness and sallowness have already started to give way. Ask your dealer for ajar of Golden Peacock Bleach Creme (concentrated)—the amazing new and harmless discovery of science. At aU good drug and department stores, ' ■ " Bleach jCreme
