Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 119, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1925 — Page 8
8
Social Activities ENTERTAINMENTS WEDDINGS BETROTHALS Mr— ISS CLARISA ROBERTSON, 5050 E. New York St., was to entertain with a bridge party and apron shower at 8 p. rn. Thursday, honoring Mum Dorothy Marquette, whose marriage to Dr. Alvin E. Newman will take place Oct. 10. Decorations were to be carried out in orchid and fuchsia. Miss Robertson was to be assisted by her mother, Mrs. H. E. Robertson, and Mrs. Harry Marquette, mother of the honor guest. Other guests were to be. Misses Helen Neal, Charlotte Mason, Beneta ('ox, Lois Williamson, Katherine Wagner, Katherine Cristina; Mesdames R. P. Cook, Oliver Greer, Dean Bonnette, Walter Judd, Dudley Smith and Frank Daniel. • * Ninety-six guests have been invited by Mrs. Carl Louis lttenbach, 3967 Broadway, to a luncheon bridge party at 1 p. m. at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Sept. 24, honoring Miss Margaret McWhorter, whose marriage to Robert J. lttenbach will take place Oct. 8, and Mrs. Edson T. Wood, Jr„ a recent bride. • * * AP~' PRETTY double-ring wedding ceremony was solemnlezd at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday at the First Presbyterian Church when Miss Catherine Covins, da ugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. (5. Covins. 1232 N. Alabama St., became the bride of Russel! I. Richardson of Detroit, Mich. The Rev. Matthew F. Smith officiated, assisted by the Rev. Leo V. Barker, cousin of the bride. Cathedral candles lighted the church, which was arranged with palms and ferns. Mr. Frank T. Edenharter, organist, played a group of bridal selections. The bride, wearing a gown of white crepe with silver fringe and embroidered in rhinestones, entered on the arm of her father She wore a veil fashioned in coronet style with rose point lace and carried a shower bouquet of Bride's roses and lilies of the valley. Her only attendant was Miss Barbara Brown, Provincetown, Mass., who wore a
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'WALK-OVER Famous Two Days’ Sale Today and Friday THREE PRICE GROUPS ‘3- |K ! 6BLACKS OXFORDS jUt/ SATINS PUMPS TANS GOLF SPORT PATENTS STRAPS SHOES DRESS TANS OXFORDS All Sizes in Entire Group 1,963 Pairs From Which to Choose FOR THE EARLY MAN advise earlv selection. ' U’dkAw = Store Opens __ _ _ _ __ „ - __ __ Special Sale on 7:30 A M SHOE STORE Men', nd Won, . Closes 6P. M. > en’s Hosiery Just j During Sale 28 N. Pennsylvania St. Inside the DoovJr
July Marriage Is Announced
* -4WWt JS&P ',< ~•
Mrs. Fred Stevens
lavender crepe gown trimmed with silver and carried an arm bouquet of asters in coral and lavender shades and butterfly roses. The bride s mother was gowned In rose and green brocaded velvet and wore a corsage of Mrs. Aaron Ward Roses. The gown of Mrs. Richardson, mother oft he bridegroom, was of blue brocaded velvet with a corsage of pink fuses. Wendell Rrown was best man. Pshfrs were O L. Richardson, Paul Fletcher of Lebanon. William l’earcy and Dr. Alexander Cavins, Hartford Conn., brother of the bride. Following an informal reception at ! the church Mr. and Mrs. Richardson left on a wedding trip. They will ht at home in Detroit after Oct. 1. Mrs. Richardson is a member of !the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority of Butler University, where she was j graduated in June She also attended Goucher College. Mr. Richardson Is a member ofthe Delta Tau Delta .• raternity at Butler. Out-of-town guests Included Mr. and Mrs. John Richardson, Mrs. George E. Adams, Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Canada, all of Lebanon, lnd.. and Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Martin, Thorn town: Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Richardson, Battle Creek, Mich.; Dr. and Mrs. Everett Hurst. Zionaville, lnd.; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Richardson, Sheridan, lnd.; Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Weinstein and Will Hunter, 'lVrre Haute, lnd. • • • Miss Anita Aultman, daughter of Gen. Dwight E. Aultman, commanding officer at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, will leave Sunday to enter Wellesley College. • • • Mrs. Robert W. ('lark, 5761 Cen ti-al Ave., and Miss Mildred Sheets, Muncie, lnd., entertained with a ! bridge-tea Wednesday afternoon at the Meridian Hills Country Club, at which the engagement of Mis? Helen ('ox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Cox. to Dwight G Von Osfol. son of Mr. and Mrs. D. t>. Van Osfol, Rush | ville, was announced. 0 0 0 Mr. and Mrs. Myron Taylor, 213!: j Park Ave.. were to entertain with i a bridge party at 8 p. m. Thursday jin honor of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor, 2724 N. Talbott St., who have I recently moved here. Baskets of ! flowers were to be used in deeora- ; lions and a color scheme of pink and white was to be carried out. Guests were to be Messrs, and Mesdames Alvan Dittrich, Kenneth Cos fin, Clarence Wilkinson. Earle Heassler and Bryant Gillespie, Jr. • * * Miss Edna W. Meyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Meyer, and Leonard Homburg were married at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the home of the bride's parents on Bluff Rd., the Rev. C. A. Hildebrand performing the double-ring ceremony. Miss Mary F. Homburg, sister of the bridegroom, was the bride’s only attendant. Henry C. Meyer, Pana,
Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Mary Ellen Allen to Fred Stevens, which took place July 25 at Shelby - ville, lnd. Mr. and Airs. Stevens are at home with the bridegroom's mother, Mrs. Rosa Stevens, 212 Han cock St. The bride was graduated this year in the nurses’ class of the Indiana Christian Hospital As sociation.
111., brother of the bride, was best man. Following a short wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Homburg will be at home at. 2722 Madison Ave. • * • The marriage of Alice Mitchel MacDougal, daughter of Mrs. F. L. MacDotigal. 130 W. Eighteenth St., to Lewis Kerr Davidson took place at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday at the home of the bride's mother, the Rev. Frederick E. Taylor officiating. Mis? Ruth Hill was the bride's only at tendant. George MacDougal Jr. was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Davidson will be at home after Oct. 1 at 130 W. Eighteenth St. • • • Mrs. Wilma Davis Mine will en terain with an informal reception for her dramatic art students in th? Palm Room of the Spinks-Arms Saturday from 2 to 4 p. m. Misses Fay Thomas and Hula Heard will be assistant hostesses. 0 0 0 Miss Elizabeth Hisey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hisey. 215 E. Thirty-Third St., will leave Sunday to enter Wellesley College. • • • Miss Betsy Green, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Green. 21 oi N Alabama St., will leave Sunday to enter Wellesley College. * • • Reginald Garstang. who will be best man at the wedding of Miss Harriet Brown and Giles Vance Smith, Sept. 19, and Henry M. Jameson, Byron K. Bllliott, Volnev M. Brown, and Alex J. Blanton, who will be ushers, were to be hosts Thursday evening at a chicken dinner at Wall's on the Martinsville R>l. in honor of Miss Brown and Mr. Smith. Other guests were to he Misses Josephine Brown, Charlotte Howe, and Mildred Brown, Evanston, 111., and Mesdames Alex J. Blanton and Henry M. Jameson. • • • Miss Katherine Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur V. Brown. 1407 N. New Jersey St., will return to Smith College for her sophomore year on Sept. ,27. • * • Miss Emily Iglehart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Iglehart. 3536 N. Meridian St., left Thursday to enter Vassar College. • • • Miss Louise Harmening, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry VV. Harnientng, 1422 E. Kelly St., and George Pyritz, son of Mr. and Mrs. August Pyritz, were married at 6:45 p. m. Wednesday at the Zion Evangelical Church, the Rev. F. R. Darles. officiating. A program of bridal music by Frederick Ha top, organist, preceded the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Pyritz will he at home at 1506 E. T.e Crande Ave. after Sept. 20.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service
This attractive one-piece dress for juniors is made with the front inset and facing cut in one and rolled to form reveres. The lower side sections are laid In pleats, and the sleeves may be in long or short length, which'ever the wearer prefers. Pongee, voile, taffeta, or mohair, are suitable materials for this style, the patterns for which, cut in sizes 6. 8, 10. 12, anti 14 years. The 8year size requires 2 yards of 40-inch material. Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest In up-to-the minute fashions. Th!B is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the coupon below, enclosing 15 cents and mall it to the pattern department of The Times. Be sure to write plain.y and to include pattern number and size.
PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed And 15 cents for which please sen! pattern No. 2075 Size Name Address City
SERMONETTES ARE POSTED IN HOTELS Employes Cautioned to Be Interested in Business as a Whole and Not to Bea ‘Know Nothing.’
No wonder the hotel service in Indianapolis Is so good! A Times reporter discovered little seiinonettes on the walls of the employes' Ualis In several hotels here. "The Know Nothings!" was the title of one. It said: "All they get in life is the gate. “Not long ago 1 was in the largest hotel In a large city. There was a convention in session. I asked a bellboy what convention it was. He didn't know. ' “I asked a maid what time the restaurant opened. She didn't know. I asked an elevator operator how far the station was from that hotel. Ht didn't know. I asked a,waiter where the barber shop was. She didn't know. I asked a porter what time table d'hote dinner was served. He had no Idea. "Afterwards I learned that that hotel was losing money. I was not surprised. Every employe there was' content to know only his own job; no Interest in any other part of the business. There was no team work.” Others read'
LETTER FROM MELVILI,K SAR TORIB TO LESLIE PRESCXITT I had forgotten, dear lady, that today there is practically no place in which to hide one's self away from all the world. When l wrote you that thnt foolishly revealing letter —I was sailing toward the Panama Canal, on the Atlantic Ocean: and T expected that soon I would he on the Pacific Ocean. I certainly did not expect I would be where you could — if you would—write me. If I had, 1 never should have written you. Evidently you had not received it when you wired me. and that is as it should he. I decided to stop over for a few hours in Ivas Angeles, when some one in the Canal Zone told me that my old friend Sergus Petroski was there—Sergus whom I had last seen at the court of the czar in St. Peters burg. an attendant upon his royal majes.y. Sergus has dropped his title since Russia's great cataclysm, and like many others, he is trying to make hiR way in moying pictures over here in America. He has been working with more or less disappointment, until very lately, and now he has gotten a splendid opportunity with that famous young actress. Paula Perrier. When I dropped in at the harbor to buy supplies for my long trip, he seemed to think I could help him by staying over afid meeting the young woman. Without knowing what I was get ting into. I became the guest of honor at perhaps the most gorgeous party I have ever attended. I con- I fess. dear lady, that I was a little j jealous of that party, as it was something more splendid and delightful than anything I have ever given myself—l. who have always prided myself upon the unique magnificence of my own entertainments. There, you see. lam already dropping into confessing things to you that I would hardly confess to myself. I had not intended to do it in this letter: but somehow T cannot help it. When I think of you, it is not as I think of any other woman in the world. I think ot you as the woman who is the other part of me—a woman to whom I can say anything. just as I could look at anything with my right eye. knowing that my left would see it in just the 'ame way. It is very probable that your friend Mrs. Atherton, whom I met at Miss Perrier's, has told you all about Miss Perrier's dinner, so I'll not go into ’etails. She has probably sent you he clippings, for, of course, the "wspapers made a great deal of the fact that I was there as guest of onor. and that I was on my way to he Orient in search of the little god. Miss Perrier's publicity man and—•>r- to that. Wh" 1 t first got into Los Ay-’i"-
■LI. ' 207 iHr j\ffl
"Wanted—Man for rapid promo lion Who car rind things without the help of the manager and three assistants. "Man who gets to work on time in the morning.- and does not imperil the live.: of others to he the llret out at night. "A man who is neat and does not sulk at a little overtime emergency work. t “A man who li.-tens carefully, hut asks only enough questions to insure accuracy In carrying out instructions. "A man who does not pity him self for having to work. "A man who does not make the same mistake twice.” “Should you be requested to locate something for a guest or condescend to perform a service for a fellow worker—not only do what you are told, hut follow up' and be assured in your own mind that your duty Is accomplished; or Immediately inform the party whom you agreed to serve that your efforts were unsuccessful. This Is 'follow up' work and i? important."
where I was going and what for. nd I was foolis heuough to tell him. He. thinking there was no secret in it, evidently told it to the reporters, and the deed was done The moment Miss Perrier had decided to give a party, which I think was one evening, when Serge had made me tell her about the little gods, she asked me to how her one of ther.i. Os course, I told her that I| hadn't one. but I described to her very carefully what they were and mad -a number of drawings. \Vha was mv surprise on the night of the dinner to find at each place one or the other of these little statues. In silver. (Copyright. 102.1. NEA Service, Inc.) NEXT —letter from Melville Nartoris to I/Cslie Prescott. ANNIVERSARY OF CLUB Members, friends and guests have been invited to the seventh annual meeting of the Daughters of the .Minerva Club and the sixty seventh anniversary of the founding of the Minerva Club, first organized women's club in the United States. Monday. in the old Knuntleroy Home, club shrine and historic birthplace, at New Harmony, Ind. Electioti of officers will be held. The program will include poems and talks, and the sketches of lives >f some of the founders of the Minerva Club. .11'ST RIGHT When measuring ingredients remember that recipes mean level measurement unless otherwise sped tied.
No More Fat; Wash It Away With La-Mar Reducing Soap New Discovery Brings Quick and Amaxin| Rcviiu/ t aod Shrinks the Skin, Keeping It Free I 'JWI From Telltale 'Wrinkles \ jraiu What will reduce me and make me thin? Science answsn k this question with La-Mar Reducing Soap, anew discovery ,|\ that reduces any part of the body without affecting other parts. Nothing internal to taka No dieting or exercises. Ilnß sfL You simply wash your fat sway without changing your reg- _,V riy/Q * j uiar routine. It acts like magic in reducing double chin, abdo men, ungainly ankles, fat wrists, arms, shoulders, taiga breasts or superfluous flesh oc any part of the body, * ViitJ j 1 m Fat is a Deediess burden, over-taxing the heart, causing mmJ \\v( I [JH high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries. And who | 1 A vJU ever taw a double chin that was beautiful or excessive fat \\ V? i .Emm* that was becoming? Fet is fatal alike to beauty and to y \uyMjH health. La Mar Reducing Soap is sold on a money-back K \\ mHBBm guarantee at all good drag and department stores the |B country over, or direct to you by prepaid parcel post, if C?"" 1 HRmB your dealer cannot supply you. Price 50c a cake or three J KW* cakes for $1.00; one to three cakes usually accomplish f [J hs purpose. You will be surprised at reshits _ LA-MAR LABORATORIES I’orr'v - Payne Building. Cleveland. Ohio gold and Guaranteed b.v Host Drue Cos., Hook Drug Cos., Goldsmith’s Cut Rate Drug Stores.—Advertisement. 9x 12Floor r 95 c- <rinc. LINOLEUM CG. V " Ilkfj 416 BAST WASMIN’GTOK ST.
VOTERS WILL CONVENE HERE Women’s League Board Has Meeting. Indianapolis was selected for the next annual convention meeting place of the Indiana League of Worn en Voters, which probably will be held late in March or early in April, st the regular board meeting Wednesday at the Spink -Arms. A resolution was adopted that tho league cooperate with the American Foundation in organizing a mass meeting here In November In the Interest of the World Court. Other business included the reports of the various committee chairmen. Mrs J E. Neff of South Bend, lnd.. chairman of the speakers' bureau, reported that she has speakers for the league's measures: world court, maternity and Infancy law and the Wadsworth-Oarrett amendment.
Clubs and Meetings The regular meeting of the Be 'Tise Club will be held Friday night at the home of Mrs. Wallace Davenport. 3630 N. Meridian St. 0 0 0 The Hoosier Tourists’ Club observed President's day with a luncheon at 1 p. m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. J. P. Asp!nail, 2833 Ruckle St. Mrs. Clay McCoy, Los Angeles. Cal., founder of the club, was an honor guest and told of a trip over the Columbia Highway. Mrs. Frank Robertson read a paper, "From the Golden Gate to the Land of the Cherry Blossoms.” New officers are Mrs. G. O. Huffman. president; Mrs. G. W. Early, vice president; Mrs. G. A. Miller, recording secretary; Mrs. Frank E. Hart, corresponding secretary: Mrs. Sherman Mott, treasurer. The retiring officers are Mrs. Hlrant Pearce, president .Mrs. Claude Spurrier. vice president: Mrs. A. F. liewis, recording secretary; Mrs Tom Halls, corresponding secretary, land Mrs. Salem Clark, treasurer. • • • The Alpha Club will give a benefit card party for the Alsarata Council. ! No. 5. at 8:30 p. m. Friday at the Red Men's Hall, North St. and Cap j itol Ave. SAVE YOUR STEPS It will save you much needless walking if you will keep a dust brush and pan on each floor of your house. Chairman of Dance Friday
’wMUggOK • g. <v
Miss Margaret Nugent J
The Y, L. S. of St. Philip Neri Church will entertain Friday evening with a dance at the hall, on Eastern Ave. Miss Margaret Nugent is chairman, assisted by Misses Marie Murphy, Dorothy Seeing. Elizabeth Tuttle. Kathleen Relfly. Eileen Fletcher. Ruth and Pauline McAtee, Merle Louis and Anna Bornman.
Wrinkles Removed in 15 Minutes —Cost 3 Cents! Quite n sensation has been created in certain social circles over the wonderful rejuvenating effects of a si/nple farkroot mixture which any woman ■an easily apply at home. The results are so remarkable that one has told others, who in turn have told many more, and now the new method bids fair to supersede all the patent “wrinkle removers,' ’ ma-sage and other things used for the purpose. This is the procedure: A spoonful of powdered larkroot Is mixed with a spoonful of lemon Juice, and this Is spread over the face. An amnzing transformation takes place, as the mirror shows. In less than 15 minutes wrinkles, crowsfeet and creases have completely rank bed! Facial contour is noticeably improved and the face looks years younger. The most skillful massaging could not produce such a wholesome effect as remains after the mixture lias been washed off. Tnrkroot Is of course perfectly harmless. Inex p-oislve. too. An original package from the druggist coniains sufficient lo bring the cost per treatment under 3 •enl s.—Advertisement.
Martha Lee Says JEALOUSY AND LOVE AREN'T SAME THING
Wonder how the idea bceame pervalent that love and jealousy are synonymous? Almost every other letter 1 seems to bear out this impression.
Perhaps It's a hand me down idea from the days when knights In armor considered jenlousy a virtue and went scouting around the coun try for persons who would give them the slightest excuse for thrusting their spears. A girl certainly could not choose her man from among many In those days. This Idea that it Is an insult for your sweetheart to look at anyone else, or have a date with any other man or girl, is ridiculous. How are you going to he sure that he or she loves you and wlil remain in love with you. If there is no opportunity to compare your charms with someone else? Jealous persons have inferiority complexes. They lack so much confidence in their ability to keep the love they have gained that their only means of defense is a “Keep Off sign. If you are afraid of the result of the comparison with someone else, you admit you are inferior. Vou should consider It a compliment that you can be chosen out of a large number rather than because there is no one else hut you. Afraid of Herself Dear Mine Martha Lee: I am a rir! 17 and when J was 16 I met a fellow with whom I fell in love at first sixht. We went lopether for about two months and hud a little Uiridish quarrel, but we are roinx together again. He tells me he loves me. but he doesn't seem settled. If I thought that in the end 1 could not have him, I would be through with life. I have but one thing against him and that is he goes with other girl* sometime*. But he tells me he loves me more than any girl he ever went with. Shall 1 give him up or trv not to be Jealous? A LONESOME BLONDE So you don't believe you could stand to be compared wdth anyone
Sister Mary’s Kitchen Breakfast Grapes, cereal, thin cream, crisp whole wheat toast, creamed dried beef. milk, coffee, Luncheon Cream of tomato soup, croutons, hard-cooked eggs and lettuce sandwiches, baked peaches, milk, tea. Dinner —Boiled salmon with egg sauce, potatoes in parsley butter, jellied vegetable salad, deep dish apple pie. rye bread, milk, coffee. This season of the year when vegetables are so plentiful there are. sure to be a variety of left-overs. A jellied salad Is a most attractive j and Ideal wav to make use of these. : Season the jelly with lemon juice, salt and pepper and use onion juice j in place of minced onion. This Is added to the jelly or sprinkled over the vegetables Baked Peaches Four fine large peaches, 4 teaspoons sugar, 4 teaspoons butter, orange juice, 1 easpoon cinnamon, 8 rounds of sponge cake, whipped cream. Pare peaches and cut in halves. Remove stones. Arrange In a shallow baking dish and fill each cavity with *-j teaspoon sugar, 'i teaspoon butter, *4 teaspoon cinnamon and 1 teaspoon orange juice. Bake twenty { minutes in a moderate oven. Place i on sponge cake with any juice in j the pan and seive when cool masked with whipped cream. (Copyright, 1925. NEA Service, Inc.) TO PRESERVE OILCIiOTH Wash your oilcloth with a mixture of one cupful of skim milk to one gallon of warm water. LOSES FLAVOR Tea and coffee if left to stand uncovered for any length of time will lose their strength and flavor.
Bate emfivith E Z BAKE 'l' t ft Wf&rmi . nigWMM ' cUSaM AmMute . Slaß EVANS' MhSE ij; ■ Best for Biscuits,PdstryXake^Broad
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THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 1923
else? Seventeen, and you'd like tq lock some boy up so he couldn't compare you with other girls? Don't carry this Jealousy too far or you'll bore the hoy to death. And you'd completely give up what might he a very Interesting and happy life for one mere man? Why the world is full of interesting, Intelligent men who will probably stack up higher than the one you are being foolish about. It's something to he proud of, that a man may go with a number of other girls ami And none of them so charming and enchanting as you, so don't ruin a friendship hy being silly. You ate too young to he in love with anyone, but yourself for awhile. Your letter shows that,
' date Tomorrow? Have a Clean White Skin Going some place tomorrow where yon want to look your best? You can. A mat- | velous new creme—Concentrated Marshal Bleach—works almost like magic. Just ono night’s treatment brings a marvelous improvement. Sallowness, blackheads, pimple*. I freckles, disappear. The natural beauty ol a clear, soft, white skin is restored. ! Try this 3 Mlnuto Test: Before retiring apply a coating of Concentrated Marsha j Bleach Creme. No massage, no rubbing. Look into the mirror the next morning and : you will be delightfully surprised at the new dear, white softness of your skin. It wnl astonish you to see the improved condition c* any blackheads, pimples, freckles or othetf j ikin imperfections whtch you mav have. I Money Hark Guarantee: If your ski,, ii not perfectly white and clear; if all your bladeheads and other skin imperfections have no( disap|ieared after five days’ treatment ol Concentrated Marsha Bleach, return the unused portion of the creme to your dealer. lit refund your money at once. For sale atJ Hang Drug Cos.. Pettis Dry Good* Cos., II P. Wasson Cos.. Hook's Dependable Drug Stores, Goldsmith's Drug Stores. Henry .1. Under, and all good drug and department stores. ooncenhcirecl/T UIL Bleach BOOK ENDS In a wide variety of very new de signs a collection of artistic piece* that one seldom finds. Assembled and displayed for your quick -elec lion i rlcod model'll!el.v Irotu $1.3(1 i lie pair upward LYMAN BROTHERS 1 ?'3 E, Ohio St, l.ln. TIM I Bring in the Family Our display of Fall wearables will make your shopI ping a delipfht. THE WHY STORE 29 E. OHIO ST.
