Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 76, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1925 — Page 6

6

FOUR STATES WILL DISCUSS CONSERVATION Indiana to Be Host For Big Gathering in October. Cllfty Falls State Park, near Madison, will be headquarters Oct. 15 and 16, for a conference of four States, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois and Ohio, on development of conservation projects. The conservation bureaus of each State will be represented. Forestry, fish and game and State parks Will be subjects for special consideration. Indiana will come forward with six division chiefs representing the department of conservation, in addition to the department’s director, Richard Lieber. Geology, forestry, entomology, lands and waters, fish and game and engineering will be represented by the Indiana delegation. Jackson to Speak Governor Jackson has been scheduled to make the address of welcome. Governor William J. Fields of Kentucky also is expecting to attend. Governor Small of Illinois has not decided whether he can attend the conference, but has directed Cornelius R. Miller, head of the department of public works and building, and W. J. Stratton, director of the Illinois department of conservation, to arrange for the State’s representation. Ohio Delegate Governor Vic Donahey of Ohio has appointed Edmund Secrest, chief forester of Ohio, to attend the conference. Other delegates will be appointed later. This will be the first regional conference upon conservation growing out of the suggestion made by the National Conference on State Parks at Skyland, Va., last Jt is expected that other groutfe of States will hold similar regional meetings.

The Tangle LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT TO RUTH BURKECONTINUED. The whole thing worrfeif out splendidly, Ruth, with one or two hitches which were smoothed out with little trouble. Jack played up to me beautifully. 1 never knew he was such a good actor before. Every little while I get a view of an entirely new Jack—a man I do not know at all. He doesn’t seem to 'have the capability of bringing out any playfulness in me. I am always serious when I am with him. Perhaps if I had played more with him he would be happier with me. I remember a woman friend of /nine who was older who told me when I -was first maijried: "Don’t ever let your husband come to regard you as he looks upon the oatmeal and cream and egg that he eats as a matter of course because it is filling and he can eat it in a hurry before catching the car. "Rather make him understand you can be and usually are the champagne and sweetbreads and trouffles that are served at dinner when the work is dene and he settles himself down for ft good time.” I presume I am the three-minute egg and oatmeal that Jack consumes every morning, and he has come to think I am quite as monotonous. In the future I will try and be gayer. Come over and help me to do It, Ruth. You are a much gayer woman 1 than I, and I am sure that Walter ' loves you for it. Mr. Sartoris sent his wire to the house, and Jack pretended to be grouchy because it had not been '■ent to the office. I, suspecting noth- '■ ing, explained, and was almost ready to quarrel with him because he would not accept my explanation. Finally he clinched matters by ■; saying that none of our friends would come on such short notice, and ended by making me a wager, which would amount to several hundred dollars, that the people I invited would not accept. Os course they did accept, and said they would be delighted to come. When Syd turned up on the afternoon of the dinner, Jack and I took him to the Travelers’ Club with us, while I was all unsuspecting that everything had been planned by the three men beforehand. After dinner Mr. Sartoris asked me where would be the best place to go and dance, and I suggested anew place which had just been opened. As soon as we were seated 1 he asked me to tango with him, and while we were out on the floor he ; began to tell me about his early life, and how his mother had betrayed his father, and his wife, himself. He had not finished • the story when the music stopped and we stepped through the door to a balcony. I became so interested I guess we did stay out there under the moonlit sky a little longer than -conventionality would approve. We were just about to go in, and I had impulsively extended my hands In sympathy, and they were warmly clasped in his, when I heard some one say: .“Leslie, do you not think we should better be going home?” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT—Letter from Leslie Prescott to Ruth Burke. GIANT GARFISH CAUGHT Du Times Special EVANSVILLE, ind., Aug. 10.— A giant alligator garfish, six feet two inches long, twenty-four inches in circumference and weighing 150 pounds was on exhibit here today after it was caught Sunday in the Wabash river by George Russell. It took six bullets to end its life.

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Before her marriage July 25, Mrs. Paul D. Alexander was Miss Marie Sullivan, Eleventh Ave., Beech 1 Grove. The wedding took place at the East Tenth Street

Girl Reporter Befriends Mrs. Hjck in Cumberland

Past as a Convict Prevents Her From Securing Employment. Winnifred Mason Huck. former Congresswoman and the first woman to preside over the House of Representatives. pot heraelf sentenced to prison. Guidtless of any crime, she sought answers to the questions— Are our prisons humane? Can a girl, crushed by her fellow men, . regain her place in society? This is the twenty-third story, written ■ for The Times. By Winnifred Mason Huck, Former representative to Con. gress From Illinois. mDID not want another Job in Pittsburgh. I only wanted to get out of town. Something of the real humiliation that an ex-convict undergoes every time his past catches up with him I suffered during the interview with the hotel man who discharged me. I was craving pastures new. Why I chose Cumberland, Md., for the next episode I have never known. Perhaps it was fate. I arrived there at 6*in the evening. There was no Y. W. C. A. and the people at the station had vague ideas concerning boarding houses. I found a cheap restaurant with a hotel attached. There I got a room for a dollar. In the morning I started out to look for work. I looked all nay. And the next morning I sta-.ted all over again. I applied in JO-cent stores, restaurants and shoe stores. Funds Low Days passed. My funds were very low. I counted my money and found that I could not spend another night 1 i the hotel. But I was still hopeful, for there seemed a bare chance of my landing a job in a shoe store I had visited the day before. I ate a discreet breakfast—discreet, financially—and stepped out with the assurance which a good night’s sleep always brings. My spirits were as low as my finances. I began to wonder whether the city jail was comfortable. If I did not get work that day I would eat my last bit of change, go to the police Btation, tell them I was broke and ask what they were going to do about it. I shivered at this thought hut I meant to follow it. And I considered what I might have done, if I h&d been really a thief, just released from prison. With a background of shoplifting or pocket picking, however good my present intentions were, I might have found temptation too strong for me. \ / That afternoon, as I walked the Cumberland streets and wondered where the next twenty-four hours would take me, I saw a newspaper office. Feeling Reckless I was feeling reckless, and I thought "Why not?” I would make a trial. In one office, I was advised to go back to house work, because that was the thing I knew. The advice was good, but I had had the experience. I wanted as a maid and I wished variety. The editor was kind, but when I told him I wag just out of jail, a chilliness came over him, for wfiich, after all, he could scarcely be blamed. He may have had experience in trying to reform sinners. In the other newspaper ofljee, they had nothing to offer me, but the editor gave me a file of their papers and told me to look through the ads. There, were none that I had not already answered. J thanked him and turned to go, my heart haevy. Then a little woman at a desk In a corner spoke to me. "Where are you staying?” she smiled. “Well, my hag is at a hotel near

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the station,” I replied. I was really not “staying” "anywhere. “I know where you can get a good room for $4 a week—right in the house where I am.” I did not have the $4, and I hesitated. “The landlady requires some reference, but I’ll vouch for you,” she Continued. Her Rooming House At 5 o’clock, I went hack to her office and went with her to her rooming house. “But you do not even know my name,” I said. “You do not know where I come from or what I have done to get into this sad state.” She ignored my remarks and asked a pointed question. I admitted that I did not have the necessary $4. “I have,” she said, “and tomorrow is pay day.” j At that she had little more than the $4 and the surplus she spent on our supper. “No, I tlo not want you to spend your money,” she said to me. “You will need y>ur money for breakfast.” Her name Is Sara Roberta Getty. She works for the morning paper in Cumberland. After dinner I went back with her to her office. My $4 room was Just as comfort,able as the one in Wheeling, and the landlady was infinitely better. I was there several days before I told her I had been a convict. When I did, she seemed a/ little shocked, hut she made no move to get rid of me. Several days passed, and I had called times without number on every merchant in town. There was no job for me. I owed Sara a good deal of money. She had risen to my need with the calm, casual air of helping an old friend out of a temporary scrape. I wanted to pay her hack as I had wanted few things in my life. But I was penniless. (hie Thing There was only one thing to do. I told her I was sure I could get a job in New York If I could only reach the city. | She gave me the money. "But suppose I should turn out badly and never return your money,” I said to her just before I boarded the train. She smiled, and I continued: “It would he an awful blow to your faith in humanity and, besides, you would lose the money.” “No,” she said, “I would not lose the money.” I wondered what she meant. “You see,’’ she explained, 'T give 10 per cent of all I earn either to the cliurch or to charity, or to help sdmebody. So if you do not send this hack, I will consider it part of the 10 per cent. “And, as for my faith in human nature, it is not so easily corrupted.” At that moment the train steamed in. I boarded it and we were oif, while .Sara stood on the platform and smiled her illumined smile after me. To this day she does not know who I am, though she writes to me as Elizabeth Sprague. Only yesterday I received one of her bright, breezy letters, and I think that I shall answer It soon, over my real name. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT: I land in New York with 43 cents. TOO MUCH CRITICISM Governor Jackson Defends Younger Generation. Bi/, United Press BATTLE GROUND, Ind., Aug. 10. --The younger generation is the target of too much criticism, Governor Jackson declared In an address Sunday at the close of the Battle Ground Assembly. “Boys and girls need better ( home training and Instruction and less carping criticism,” he said. COMPANIONS SOU GHT Police today were searching for two companions of a 14-year-old hoy, who was caught in the Hoffman •Sporting Goods Company, 934 E. Washington St., Saturday. Police say the lad had taken a rifle and $7.10. Carl Hoffman, owner said the other two lads fled. The lad is held in the detention home. .

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

HIKER HEARS STORY OF INDIAN SURVEY

Sign Near Gosport Tells of of ‘Ten O’clock Line’*Dated 1809. Note—Nell Gordon of The Times staff is making a unique tour of Indiana—on foot and with the assistance of motorists who give her a lift. A stonr or her experience appears in The Time a each day. _ By Nell Gordon MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Aug. 10. —A visit to Martinsville on State Rd. 22, would hardly be complete without a trip to the ponds where eight njillion go ld fish ar*-" raised annually. Unfortunately the road leading to the fishery is unmarked except for a small sign, muqh discolored and hardly nevertheless hundreds of cars had found the turn “by the clay hank two miles east of the city” as it was described to me. The gold fish are raised In small shallow ponds and as one approaches, the water appears to take on a reddish hue, like a pool of blood. This is from the many hundred of tiny red gold Jlsh swimming under the surface. I asked how the shipping was done when the fish are wld to the numerous stores. “We ship, in cans with a ventilated cover and a large base. In thesq cans the little fellows arrive safely all over the world, apparently none the worse for their long journeys. We instruct the railroad people as to the feeding and there is very little loss. Here at the ponds we feed four times a week,” explained Roy Ostler, a fish nurse. Goes to Gosport Leaving Martinsville I continued down through Paragon and Gosport. A cement marker and the sign "Gosport on the ten o’clock line” which is to the right of the road just before the village is reached, attracted ,ny attention. As on most of the highways in the State, the weeds wore high and the m&rker almost hidden from View. I enquired from a family who were mending a tube by the roadside as to the-significance of the slab but they pleaded ignorance. I walked to a? nearby house. The woman explained that it had something to do with the Indians. “I know that whatver it was It went right through my kitchen, but I have never heard it explained by anyone who knew enough about It to understand It themselves," was her' honest If indefinite reply. Tells Indian Story Hiking to the village I arrived at the drug store of J. M. Cooper, -who was very busy dispensing sodas. Between customers I managed to obtain the following story from hifn: “In the early day, when the Government took over the land from the Indians only part was being taken," he said. “A survey was made by the Government which the Indians refused to accept and they demanded that a sun survey be made. A starting point was chosen, and when the sun crossed that point, which was at 10 o'clock in the morning, a line was drawn for many miles, the Indians relinquishing to the Government all the land north of the 10 o’clock sun line. The date on the marker is Sept. 30, 1809.” Hiker Studies Rocks A slfort distance from Spencer I met a young man who was hiking across fields to study the formation of the rocks. He had driven from Dayton, Ohio, and parked his car several miles awttyrjrom the highway where I met him. When I asked for his name and a story of his study of the rocks, he modestly /.-■plied: “."ty name la Bennett and I ' ” r (•* ' ayton my home at present • 1 mm not looking for publicity antl ( would rather you r*ould keep the c .act nature of my research a secre.. but I am willing to tell you what I know about the stone ’in thin locality, if you wish. “I presume,” he continued, "that you are often told that a manufacturing plants is the largest in the world or a certain product is the only thing of its kind in the world and all that. Being in the newspaper game you have learned to discount the largest in the world stuff, hut when -I tell you that down here in these counties there is a rock not found in any other part of the world I mean just that. Indiana is the only State and Morgan, Monroe and Lawrence are the only counties in the world .where oolitic stone Is found. Very little is known of the early formation of this stone, but it is believed it was made from millions and millions of little bugs, called oolitics. Undoubtedly where the rock now is was once a lake. With the drying of the lake which was caused by some unknown event, the bodies of these millions of little water/ bugs remained where the lake was and In time became hardened into stone. Describe Formation “The rock formation lies In the shape of a boomerang and reaches from Spencer through Bloomington,

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forty miles long and forty feet thick. The peculiar thing about this oolitic' or Bedford stone, as it is usually called, is its softness when first removed from the ground. This softness permits of carving of the stone with any design desired. Another perculiar quality is that the stone hardens in the air, so after quarrying the carving is done, the stone allowed to harden anh a lasting memorial is built. Some of the finest fronts of the finest buildings in the world are built of this atone,” he concluded. Deciding to visit the stone country I faced toward the little village of Oolitic and the city of Bedford.

QOCIAL Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS

ISS GEORGIA N. Meridian St.,. entertainejj charmingly Monday afternoon wi;h a tea for the bridal party of Miss Fleeta Heinz, and James E. Hulshizer of Nitro, W. Va., whose marriage will take place Tuesday at 4:30 p. m. at the Irvington Methodist Church. The bridal color scheme of pink and orchid was used in the appointments for the tea table, and in the ices. The tea was to be followed by a bridal dinner at the Spink-Arms given by Miss Heinz. Miss Heinz planned to present her attendants with hand-painted vases, and Mr. Hulshizer was to give his attendants gold penknives. • The table was to be Arranged in the bridal colors and covers were tube’“laid for Misses Georgia Osborn."Rebeccah Daugherty, Jean Mar.der; l Beatrice Batty, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hand of Nitro, W- Va.; H. J. Houk and W. L. Wintz of Nitro, W. Va.: Wilbur Dunkel and Maurice Mackay. Miss Osborn, whose marriage to Wilbur Dunkel will be an event of the eearly fall, will be guest of honor Aug. 19 at a party given by Miss Billie Mae Kreider of Plainfield, Ind. • • * Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Lehman, Richelieu Apts., will entertain Friday evening with a suoper party in honor of Miss Joan Boden, and Merle Krug, whose marriage will take place Saturday. party will follow rehearsal for the wedding at the All Saints CathedraL Guests will be members of the bridal party • • * Miss Nelle Stephenson, of Danville, Ind., is the guest of her brother, Robert E. Stephenson, 2716 W. Washington St., and family. Mr. Stephenson, and family and Miss Stephenson have returned from a visit with George Stephenson at Elgin, 111. • • • Blde-a-Wee Club will entertain Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Marie Deetrlck, 1130 S. West St. * • • Mrs. Frances S Wands, 1433 N. Pennsylvania St., has returned from a five weeks’ trip through the East. She spent three weeks at Anbury Park, N. J. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Schaub, 1483 N. Pennsylvania St., have returned from a trip to St. Louis, Mo., accompanied by Mrs. Schaub’s mother. •• • . Mrs. Frank J. Swindell, 608 N. Emerson Ave, entertained Friday evening with a pretty shower In honor of her sister. Miss Ellen Coiilson, whose marriage to Ralph H. McM*’Men will take place In the early fall. The house was decorated with -.••den flowers and favors were Jttu-arican Beauty roses. Guests included Misses t Josephine Breen. Helen Richardson, Geraldine Stokes, Lucille Dichmann, Esther Manzey, Helen Manning, Wanda Coulson, Isabel Russell, Ethel Manzey, Helen Barber, Marguerite Coulson Irene Smith. Kathrine Hodapp, Catherine McCarthy, Flora Lees, .and Mrs. Rutherford G. Diggle. • • • Lavelle Gossett Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars will give a benefit card party Tuesday evening at 902 N. Pershing Ave. • • * Member? of the George H. Chapman, W. R. C'. No. 10, will meet Tuesday t 2 p. m. at G. A. R. headquarters. * * * No. 7 Divisioi , L. A. A. O. was to entertain with eucher, bunko and lotto Monday at 8 p. m. at 116 E. Maryland St. Mrs. Anna. Hagerty is hdbtess. * • • Alvin P. Hovey W. R. C. 196 presented two silk flags to Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, No. 17 at the Olive Branch Christian Church Saturday evening. Mrs. Bessie Russell was patriotic! instructor. • • * Miss Helen and Miss Elizabeth Clark, 517 Powell Place, have returned from a three weeks motor trip through the East.

- Martha Lee Says ■ MAKE UP TO THE OLD MATE—NOT A NEW ONE

Remember the dog who dropped his perfectly good bone for the reflection of it he saw in the water "and lost both? That's wMt a lot of men and women do who exchange old wives and husbands for new ones.

The first year of married life is uphill for a lot of people. It Is the time of adjustments td each other, when perhaps, they have come from entirely different homes and habits. But it isn’t the hardest year. There comes a time along about the third to the fifth year, when Mary thinks she will scream if John runs his tongue around his teeth after breakfast once again. And John feels like leaving home forever every time Mary taps her fingernails on anything. Then they both jump to the conclusion that they’ve fallen out of love, and go roaming around looking over into the grden pastures of other matrimonial fields and deciding they love someone else better. What they need is a vacation —not a divorce. And not a long vacation, either. I Discontented Dear Miss Lee: I am 18 xears old. and have been married three years. We have a baby a year old. Am etttnrdloontentrd. Fve been srood to my htlbby. but he is so cold to me. Comee in ana joes out without sayms a word. If he say* anvthin*. It is a short answer. We have not lived to ourselves *mee we were married. I found a fefiOw I love better than my husband. I love my baby and cannot leave for that reason, he says. He'd tret the child. Am I dotnr my husband wrong living with him when I don t love him DISAPPOINTED BLOND. I should think a year old baby would keep you top busy to get discontented. That is apparently what is the matter with you. You’ve grown tired of marriage because you have too much time to think about yourself and your abuse. Try giving more time to your baby and husband, fixing up your room, and keeping your baby and yourself looking fresh and 'sweet, and he’ll get over his surliness. Wouldn’t you be surly if you knew he was

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looking around for another mate and generally making trouble for both of you? Stop thinking about other men and concentrate a little more on the one you have. For a Foolish Girl Dear Miss Lee: I am a college student and have been in love with a girl of the town where I attend school. Unfortunately It seems as though at that time she enjoyed the 30ciety of several of my fraternity brothers better than she did mine. However, on several occasions when he saw me in company with other girls she •aid it was only then that she realized that she cared for me. At times she did things of such nature that really cut me to the heart, such as kissing another fellow in my presence. . . Now that I have come sway to work through the summer months and have more or less forgotten her. she has written me several letters. I am puzzled whether to write to her. I am afraid if I don't write I will lose her friendship when I go back to school next fall. I don t care for her as much as I did. How should I write if I do GEORGE COLLEGE. I think the girl han shown herself ui® very foolishly. No girl worth cultivating or caring for xHll deliberately set about to wound or hurt any one. If she thought to a/fd you to her string by playing upon your Jeaousy and keeping yqu always on the anxious seat, I certainly wouldn’t let her "get away with It." I am sufe/ George, that there are much finer girls in your college town than this one. But if you really wan) the friendship of a silly girl,

CLEARANCE SALE UNITED RUG & NOW ON LINOLEUM CO. Savings of From 10 to 50% cn kast vianhington st. Arch Fitting a Specialty a/mPH? Grover’s Comfort Shoes MO „ : w *T H OS - Strap, and Oxford. 141 F - WASH.

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DEODORIZERS 50c Axuolin S9c 25c Amolln 19c 26c Kversweet *• 25c Mum 19c 50c N*il .’ 89c 50c Non-Spi 89c Me Odorono ...........••••••.•••99c 60c Odorono SOAPS 20c Armour's Stork Castile ISo 20c Bocabelll Castile 13c 75c Clayton's Dog Soap life 25c Cutlcura Soap. 19ci 3 for ....86c 30c Packer'a Tar Soap 28c 60c Packer'a Liquid Tar Soap ..46c 25c Pear's Glycerine Soap 17e 20c Pear's Unarcnted Soap 16c 10c Jergen’a Violet Glycerine Soap 8c 25c Glover’s Dog Soap 26c Woodbury’s Facial Soap, 18c, S for 39c 30c Reslnol Soap 19c 60c Socletl Hyglentlque Soap 48c 26c Germicidal Soap ...,19c 16c Friteh’s Soap. 8 for 29c TALCUM POWDERS 40c Azurea Talcum Powder 29c 40c DJer-Kiss Talcum Powder ..22c 25c J. A J Baby Talcum 19c Mary Garden Talcum 24c 25c Mavis Talcum Powder 19c SI.OO Mavle Talcum Powder 74c 25c Blue Rose Talc 19c 25c B. & B. Baby Talcum 19c 50c Plnaud'a Lilac Talc ~..89e 25c Boncilla Talc ..19c Colgate's Talcum Powder 16c Chet Lul Talc 88e KIDNEY REMEDIES H)c Doan s Kidney I*lll* 46c We Foley's Kidney Pills .........49c SI.OO Foley s Kidney Pills 84c 50c OeWltt’s Kidney Pills 8 SIOO DeWitt’s Kidney Pills Hr BOc Swamp Root .....44c SI.OO Swamp Root Me SI.OO San Yak Me $1.50 Sanmetto ® BOc Monnett's .Kandolts ...49c $1 00 Monnett's Kandolts 74c jOc Dodd's Kidney Pills 49c LAXATIVES 50c N. R. Tablets 39c 23c N. R. Tabiete 19e 30c Edwards’ Olive Tablets 84c 15c Edwards Olive Tablets 13c 50c Hinkle Pilla **c 25c Carter’s Liver Pills **c 30c Doan’s Keguleta Me 50c Caacarets 39c 25c Cascareie lc 25c Pierce’s Pellets 19c SI.OO Bliss Native H*rb Tabs. ...Me BLOOD REMEDIES $1.90 S. S. S sl-36 sl.lO S. H. S 74c $1 26 Ayer * Sarsaparilla 89c $1.25 Hood’s Sarsaparilla 89c $1.20 B. B. B. Blood Balm 84c $1.25 Burdock Blood Bitters ....98c SI.OO Cutlcura Resolvent 79c JOc Cutlcura Resolvent 45e SI.OO Jones Sangvlm 74c TONICS SI.OO Bitro Pboapbate .84c 50c Blaud's Iron Pills Mo $1.60 Cadomene Tablets 98c $1.50 Fellow's Com Syr. Hypo. sl.lO $1 25 Gude's Tepto Siangan SBc $1.26 Grays' Glycerine Tonic ....98c $1.25 Hugee'a Cordial BBc $1.50 Maltines (all kinds) 98c SI.OO Miles' Tonic 79c sl.lO Nuzated Iron 74c $1.20 Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery BVr 60c Scott's Emulsion 39c SI.OO Pure Cod Liver Oil 6< SI.OO Wampole'a Ex. Cod Liver Oil 74c SI.OO Tanlac 80c Jl.oo Pepgen 09c SI.OO Peruna .....M DYSPEPSIA REMEDIES 75c Bellana 69c 25c Bellana j ....19c 30c Stuart’s Charcoal Tablets 24c 60c Pape's Diapepaln Tablets....ao 60c Fairchild's Ess. Pepsin ...,46c SI.OO Fairchild’s Ess. Pepsin ...,84c $1.20 Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin ...84c 60c Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin ...,44c 25c Charcomlnta 19c 50c Eatonic

MONDAY, AUU. iU, l'JZd

write her a note abosolutely free from the peraonnl equation. Over a Shorn Head Dear Martha Lee: I have been m.trrlril two years. My husband and I loved each other and were every happy until now 1 knew he did not liked bobbed haJr I told him I wan going to bob mine and he did not nav much attention to me o I bobbed my tiidr and aim. then he doean t speak to P*' J. *bi heartbroken now and I still love him. Please tyll me what to do . w. . ANNA I think you are being rather silly —both of you. If your lov® Isn’t strong vnough to weather a wmall blow like this, I don't know whnt. you'll do when you meet some reel crisis. If you had pretty hair and he loved it he doubtless feels ugly because you cut It off and is trying the only way he can think of to punteh you. If you are foolish enough to take this seriously and moan around about It, he'll keep lt up. If you are blythe about it. he’ll oon see that probably you look as well with your lyiir off and are Just the same girl that he loved. OIJ) SCHOOLHOUSES TO GO Bu Times Special MARION. Ind.,,Aug 10—The "little red echoolhouse" will be no more in Green Township after Tuesday, when Ward M. Kilgore, trustee, will sell nix abandoned school buildings at auction. Completion of the new $60,000 consolidated grade school building north of Point Isabel made this possible. HOME-MADE PIES AND CAKES Deliriously Appetizing , Take Them Home With You De Croes Pastry Shops 216 E. onto. 427 MANS. AVE.

27 S ~ lUinois St 53 S. Illinois St. 103 W. Wash. St. bi***

FACE LOTIONS *I.OO Hind's Honey and AL Cr...7e 86c Holmes FroatlHa *4® 50c Orchard White JJR 75c Oriental Cream $1.50 Oriental Cream s■• 40c Clycerlne Lotion *** DEPILATORIES 75c Evaua' Depilatory ...-s9e 60r X Bazin **• 50c Keet 89c $6.00 Zip ....$3.98 SI.OO Delatone *4e FACE CREAMS Ayer’a Creams. fJOc Berry’s Freckle Cream 4se $1.26 Berry's Kremola 98c *sc Boncilla Vanishing Cream...B9c 75c BouMllh Cold Cream 69c SI.OO BoncDlx Beautlfler 74c 50c Dag. a Ram. Cold Cream.... 890 00c Elcaya Cream .....4e 00c Malvina Cream 49c 50c Milkweed Cream 8 SI.OO Milkweed Cream ....7io 00c Pompeian Day Cream 45 00c Pompeian Night Cream Mo It.oo Pompelnn Night CreMm ....74c 75c Satin Skin Cold Cream 69n 75c Sntln Skin Van. Cronin 600 00c Sea Shell Cream 480 25c Woodbnry’a Facial Cream ...19e 50c Woodbiirv'a Facial Cream...B9c 50c Theatrical Cream J... 950 50c Lemon Cream FOR ‘-’HE HAIR $2.50 Bare to GslrV m Q.SI.9S 50c Cleero ..Js-. 3c ft.OO Walfcee 3. ,84c SI.OO Onndnrlna Tj1..74e 50c Oanderlne ij., 89c 35c Oanderlne .1..29c $1.25 Canute Water 1..®8c $1.50 Brownatone .sll9 50c Brownatone J..Bse ft.OO I.otna /..Me SI.OO Lucky Tiger 74r 50c Lucky Tiger s9c Me Wild Hoot Hair Tonic t*c 35c Wild Root Hair Tonic 2c SI.OO Wild Hoot Hair Tonic 84c >1.50 Mnry T. Goldman ....... .$1.19 >1.50 Kolorhak $1.19 >1.50 Pinand'a Flair Tonic ~...51.19 76c Pinand'a Hair Tonle 84c 25c Golden Glint .....ISe 2Se Golden Glint Shampoo 190 50c Parker Hair Tonic .........880 >t,oo Parker Hair Tonic ....14e >I.OO Liquid Arvon s4# SI.OO B. Paul Henna (all colora) 74. 16c Amaral $ for 98e $1.60 Westphall 60c Weatphall SI.OO K. D. X CHAMOIS SKINS 75c Chnmota Skin ...............S9 SI.OO Chamola Skin „...7* $1.50 Chamola Skin $1.75 Chamola Skin sl.lß $2.00 Chamois Skla $2.50 Chamola Skin ... u ..*. a ,51.74 FLOOR WAX 36c Johnson Floor Wax, powder.ss• 50c Johnaon Floor Wax, powder .SO. 75c Johnson Floor Wax, powder.Bß. 50c Johnaop Floor Wax, llqotd.tte 75c Johnaon Floor Wax, liquid. S9e $1.20 Johnaon Floor Wax, liquid Me FURNITURE POLISH 23c Lyknn Polish v... 170 50c Lyknn Polish SI.OO Lyknn Poll* ,„ , 30c Liquid Vaneer —,.,ss* 60c Liquid Veneer .. 30c O'Cedar Polish .........^..Ua 00c O Cedar Polish ss• FLESH REDUCER SI.OO 011 Koreln Capsules SI.OO Marmola Tabiete .........,74a $1.25 Arboleue ,a. 75c Thyroid Tablets, 1 gr. o SI.OO Phy-Thy-Bln s9e $1.50 San-Grt-Na Tablets 81.19 $1.50 San-Grl-Ns Bath Salts ...st.i SI.OO Fayro Salts u .., m ,..14i