Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 107, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1926 — Page 6
PAGE 6
SOCIAL ACTIVITIES
Miss Pauline Neal, 2312 Kenwood Ave., was hostess at a bridge party ; Monday evening at which the enI gagement of her sister. Miss Mable ' E. Neal, to Bennett Pearce Hunter of Atlanta, Ga., was announced. Miss Neal was assisted by her mother, Mrs. John Neal, and Mrs. True Carpenter. The house was tastefully decorated with vari-colored summer flowers arranged in baskets, and table appointments were In delicate pastel shades. The guests included Mesdames Layton Carter, Francis Clayton Smith, John D. Cantrell, Cleveland, Ohio; True Carpenter and Misses Vance Garner, Ethel Boyle, Evelyn Vance, Anne Smith, Edith Silver, Ella Sengenberger, Elizabeth Moore, Florence oJnes and Irene McLean. • * * A pretty home wedding took place Monday when Miss Florece Tharp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tharp, 412 N. Dearborn St., became the bride of Harold G. Shaffner, at the home of her parents.. The Rev. A. H. Vonnell of Aurora, Ind., performed the ceremony. The bride's only attendant was Miss Mabel Bender of Anderson, who was gowned in pale yellow crepe. The bride was lovely in a shirred gown of white silk crepe, and she carried an arm bouquet of bride roses and lilies of the valley. Mr. and Mrs. Schaffner left on a motor trip to Niagara Falls, and will be at home at 412 N. Dearborn St., after Aug. 15. * • • Miss Marianne Reid and Robert Scott Wild will be married at 8:30 tonight at the Tabernacle Presbyterian Church. A bridal dinner in their honor was given at the Columbia Club Monday evening by Mr. and Mrs. Jackson K. Landers of 3350 N. Meridian St. The long table was decorated with summer flowers—delphinium, roses, larkspur, forget-me-not e, gladiloluses and butterfly bush, arranged in a .silver boat. On each side of the centerpiece was a flve-braneh silver candllobrum with softly glowing i white tapers. Plateaus of flowers j were at. each end of the table. Guests included Misses Anna j Louise Griffith, Louise Robison of i Wichita, Kan.; Marjory Lewis, Elizabeth Slfers of lola, Kan.; Mary Esther Hovey of Kansas City, Mo.; Messrs. Dean R. Lowe of Chicago; Irving Fauvre, Fish Landers, Neil Campbell, William Florea, Harry S. Shepard, Francis Brosnan. Cassius Curtis of Nobelsvtlle, and Messrs, and Mesdames L. G. Wild. George F. Hovey of Kansas City, Mo., and Hobert C. Winslow. • • Miss Rosalind Barnes of Detroit, Mich., who is the house guest of Mrs. Edward A. Lawson, 354 E. Fall Creek Blvd., and Mrs. Ross F. Johnson, Jr., will be honor guests at a breakfast-bridge Wednesday given by Mrs. Leonard A. Murchison at the home of her mother, Mrs. Edwin R. Schreiner, 4226 Carrollton Ave. Mrs. Johnson, before her recent marriage, was Miss Frances L. Bruner. • * • Miss Rosalind Barnes of Detroit, Mich., who is the house guest of Mrs. Edward A. Lawson, 3354 E. Fall Creek Blvd., will be the honor guest at a breakfast-bridge Wednesday morning, given by Mrs. Leonard A. Murchison at the home of her mother, Mrs. Edwin R. Schreiner, 4226 Carrollton Ave.
The marriage Is announced of Miss Winifred M. Terry, daughter of Mr. end Mrs. Frederick Terry, 3335 N. HEAL SKIN DISEASES Apply Zemo, Clean, Penetrating, Aniiseptiic Liquid It is .unnecessary for you to suffer with Eczema, Blotches, Ringworm, similar skin troubles. Zemo will usually give Instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and M nthes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful penetrating, disrtqioarlng liquid and is soothing to the jimiki delicate skin. It is recommended i ‘i daytime use because It doesn’t show, ■i It today from any druggist. Small fltlo or large bottle 51.00. —Adver- > moment. FOR NERVOUS INDIGESTION iftke Todd’s Tonic. It Is Invaluable for loss of appetite, It stimulates digestion and It soothes the nerves. Start the day with a dose poured over your morning grapefruit, and with other meals try It poured over sliced, fresh or canned fruits. TODD’S TONIC is a wine-like preparation based on the health-giving juice of the grape, combined with tonic medicines. "With the first bottle you can see ■what a splendid building tonic it is Todd’s Tonic Is pleasant to take — ii lone, or with fruits. For sale at all Haag Drug Stores and all other drug stores throughout this section. Todd’s Tonic Laxative Tablets—“A Dose at >yght—Makes Everything Right.”—Advertisement.
THE SILK SHOP No. 27 Monument Circle SUMMER SILK SALE 10,000 Yards of New Seasonable Silk, $1.25 the Yard 40-inch printed crepe de chine. Printed 33-inch striped silks. Stripes are good silks are good style, and will continue the year round. This is a good, heavy, to b. good. The price i. ju.t half o t > l .-“ k * ?* hble "“ ,er “ L S--: II x sr.”:--"."? $1.25 in..- $2.50 heavy plain crepes. Colors, $2.00 all-silk Shantung. Colors, rose, black, tan, cocoa, jade, rose, pekin, coral, jade, orchid, pekin Off brown, peach and pink. d*l Off and white. Sale Sale * 1,000 yards of rayons and silk and cotton crepes, in stripes, pff checks and floral patterns. These materials originally sold V/1 for 98c and $1.48 the yard. Sale j * U * LOTS OF OTHER MATERIALS AT EQUALLY LOW PRICES
Meridian St., to Dr. Joy F. Buckner of Ft. Wayne. The wedding took place Aug. 7. The bride 1* a graduate of the University of lowa and a member of the Kappa Gamma sorority. Dr. Euckner is a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and a graduate of the Indiana Medical School. * • • Miss Mary Louise Mann, 1342 N, Illinois St., was the hostess today for a luncheon and shower at the Splnk-Arms in honor of Miss Margaret Wolfard, who will be married to Donald La Fuze at the '-Irvington Presbyterian Church Wednesday. A miniature bride formed the centerpiece at the table and yellow and white flowers were arranged at the ends. Covers were laid for Miss Wolfard, Miss Pauline Holmes and Mrs. Dale Hodges, Mrs. William Schumacher, Mrs. James Carpenter and Miss Mann. • * * Mrs. Dovie Osborne Jones of Irvington will entertain Saturday evening with a dinner party for the Chess Club of Mooresvllle. The guests will Include Mesdames and Messrs. Jefferson Miles, Orville Templeton and William Henley, Eva Antrim. Paul Hadley, Miss Jennie Scott, Frank Manker of New York and Clifton Wheeler of Indianapolis. • * * Mr. and Mrs. George Rockwood and daughter Diana, of 1606 N. Delaware St., sailed today from New York on the S. S. Columbus, to spend the remainder of the summer on a j general European tour. . . . Miss Alma Sickler, 220 E. Eleventh St., has as her house guests, Mr. and Mrs. E. R Laird of Chicago, who arrived today. Wednesday afternoon, Miss Sickler will 1 entertain with a bridge part for Mrs. Laird and for Mrs. James A. Kelley, a recent bride. Mrs. Kelley was Miss Florence Yount. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Curry and son. Jack of 5429 Guilford Ave.: Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Warren and son, James. 3121 Park Ave., and Albert S. Meurer, 4526 Washington Blvd., are spending the week-end at Lake Manitou. • • • Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Oildehaus and family. 3847 Gracelgnd A v - have returned from a motor trip to Pacudah, Ky., and French Lick. • • • Mrs. Walter Estes of Tulsa, Okla., and Mrs. Percy feu tier of Joplin, Mo., arrived today for a visit with Mrs. Paul Bigler, 3313 Washington Blvd. I I* • • ' Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Smith Fisher, 1229 N. Pennsylvania St., and Mrs. Harriet Keefauvre, 19/ErSt. Joseph St., have returned from a motor trip to Pawpaw Lake, Mich., and Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Fisher have as their house guests Mrs. Emma Fisher of New Orleans and Raymond Fisher of Chicago. The latter will leave in a few days by motor for California. * * • Mrs. Logan Burdine, 452 E. Walnut St., entertained the Pern Nies Club at her home Monday evening. The guests were: Misses Inez Townrend, Mary \Kerg. Emma Reid, Naomi Le Baw', Elinore Coppock, Minnie Jenks and Esther Briles. *' * * Mrs. Fount Smith, 21 N. Oxford St., and Mrs. Matt Crowley of Covington, Ky„ who has been Mrs. Smith’s house guest, left today for a six week’s tour through Denver, Col., and other points in that State and California. • • • Miss Margaret Lahr of Kansas City, Mo., is the house guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George W. Lahr, 5330 Ohmer Ave.
Plane Tour Winner Will Get This
This silver trophy, the gift of Edsel Ford, will go to the winner of the airplaoe reliability tour, now under way. The tour is expected to develop commercial aviation. VISION OF VIRGIN BERLIN —On tho statement of two girls who said they saw the vision of the Virgin while praying, a little town near here has become overrun with crippled, maimed and blind who expect cures.
Soloist for State Fair Program
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Mrs. .Arnold Spencer Under the direction of the Indiana State Federation of Music Clubs, the State fair, an “Old Melodies Concert” will be presented. Mrs. Arnold Spencer, prominent soprano and widely known in music circles, will be one of the soloists.
A WOMAN'S By AUene Sumner PARIS, Aug. 10.—I have just been put through the Parisian beauty process. I seem to look about the same. But there Is every good and fitting reason why I should not. The beauty process in Paree, la la, is something else* again from the home process where one says,: “give me a lemon rinse and round curl and please be quick. I am on my lunch hour." One must dedicate at least half a the Muse of Beauty In Paree. antr monsieur the beautifler would coo and gush and curl and anoint for a steady eight hours if encouraged An appointment is made with qJI due romp and ceremony. Madame, the pension keeper, being blest with certain powers of speech with which Pansy Herring Pretzel, my duenna, and I are not, makes the appointment a full week ahead of the festive occasion. For an appetizer, madame lists that we will have ze hair cut, za shampoo, ze ondulation. ze perfume, ze tonic,, ze hot air, and ze rub. , She explains that once we see the glories of the shpp and observe the prowess of the monsieur who makes fair ladies fairer, we will go through the entire bill *>f fare from soup to nuts. • • • Gomes The Day. No less than six monsluers, all most chic with varnished mustachios. bow us in with a tenor chorus of "bon Jour, madames.” An aproned monsieur, a bit fairer than the rest, ushers us into his own personal boudoir, a sanctum sanctorum of rose and gold with cherubim and seraphim playing tag around the walls. Monsieur immerses us In frilly rose colored aprons or smocks, which might have seen cleaner days. Dabs of absorbent cotton are wadded around the collar “to keep ze leetle hairs from tickling so. yes." The haircut differs little from our American Ilk, only interspersed by the cooings of monsieur as ho praises the glories of his handiwork and calls upon us, too, to admire. Shampooing, too, is to these Parisian shops but a cursory thing—a dabbling on of soap and a quick rinsing off. They are Impatient for the next step, which is to them the one and only reason for a shampoo —the perfume. • • • With the pomp of the cellarer proffering his wirte list, monsieur proffers his “lotion card!” He breaths out arias to the charms of Jasmine, rose de Jacquimot, amhre, emeraude, Was pourpre, narclsse bleu. In vain do we try In hybrid French to protest that we have no desire to go about attracting the honey bees. The perfume on ze head Is what no lady escapes without, and I don’t mean maybe! We choose one which sounds least offensive and wait the dab. It comes in the way of a water spout—a cloudburst, a torrent, an entire quart bottle dumped upon one poor defenseless head. We gasp for gas masks, but none come. • * • Then once again the scene doth change. Monsieur lovingly pats our tresses into his idea of the choicest,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, 4 ( ' Indianapolis Time*, Indianapolis, In<L 2 8 0 2 Inclosed And 15 cents for which send pattern No. 1 61 ° U “ Size Name • t Address - • City *• .
ONE-PIECE DRESS Today’s design Is 2802. The woman who likes smart tailored frocks will appreciate Design No. 2802, In straightline styling. The Inset front and patch pockets are destinctive features. Popular fabrics for its development are men's madras shirting, finely striped flannel, flat silk crepe, figured j georgette crepe, stantung and crepe faille. If you are 36-inch bust measure, it will only require ,2% yards of 32 or 36inch material, with *6 yard of 36lnch contrasting. Just two major parts to pattern; practically only four seams to sew. See small figures! The pattern is obtainable In sizes -6, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust measure. Price 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Our patrerns are made by the leading fashion designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Every day The Time? will print on this page, pictures showing the latest up-to-date fashions. This is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 15 cenfs, coin preferred, and, mailing it to the pattern department of The Times. Delivery is made In about one week. Be sure to write plainly and to include pattern number and size. the dernier cri, the last thing than which nothing is laster. We are given dips and curlecues and cauliflower ears and swirls and roller coaster glides. Our temples, ears, and even the nape of the neck are garnished as though our faces were a plat dip jour, and all the possible trimmings of rosebud radishes, butter snails and sprigs of parsley were being attaoted thereto. Pansy Herring-for-short opines that I resemble Fatima with snakes crawling over her brow. * * • Then once again the ‘scene is changed. With our tresses dripping quarts of water down the neck, a Fatima-like veil is drawn over oUr face and curlioued locks. AIM that’s but the half of It. dearie. An object somewhat resem bling a mule's feed bag is dropped over our heads. The effect is ghoul ish—only eyes and nose emerge through the proper slits. We resemble the High Kleagle on feast day. The bag begins to swell like a blimp preparing for ascent. We clutch the chair* anus to escape vaulting heavenward. Blasts of hot and cold air swirl upon our heads. Monsieur departs for a moment. The blimp gets hotter and hotter. We cannot take, it off. We do not know the French words for “too hot.” We yell "ties something." and while waiting for the next word, monsieur, assuming that we mean "tres froid.” or “very cold," turns on some more hot air. We yell. A good yell seems to bring the same results in any tongue. We are rescued. When* our heads have been properly heated and chilled and dried in the feed hag, the ondulation. marcel. Is given. The bill? Six francs for shampoo, six franc for cut, eight francs for .the perfume water spoujt, seven francs for the ondulation. Total, 27 francs or 81 cents. You should see me!
Recipes By Readers
NOTE —The Times will give a recipe filing cabinet for recipe submitted by a reader and printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily. Except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Cabinets will be mailed to winners. Write only one recipe, name, address and date on each sheet. SWEET POTATO PUDDING To one quart of grated sweet potatoes add one pint of sweet milk, two tablespoons of flour, one and one-half cups of sugar, one-half .cup raisins, one egg, one teaspoon nutmeg, two tablespoons butter. Mix all together thoroughly and bake in a moderate oven, stirring occasionally. Mrs. Martha White, 1712 Kessler Blvd., Indianapolis.
FOR SPORTSWOMAN
This swagger sport set is intended to display your favorite dog, appliqued }ln fur on the woolen scarf and on the mannish felt hat.
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Sister Mary’s Kitchen
Nearly every housekeeper has experienced the tragedy of finding the cream “turned” when breakfast is late and there’s no chance to "run to the grocery” for fresh. And she feels that sour cream Is her pet household pest. And then later in the day when things are eased up a bit she again turns her attention to this same sour cream and welcomes it as a baking benefactor. There's nothing that gives quite the rich flavor and tender texture to cakes and cookies like sour cream. And a salad dressing is vastly Improved by the addition of whipped or plain sour cream. Whenever cream is used In place of milk the amount of shortening must be reduced, otherwise the food may "fall” while baking or crumble disastrously when removed from the pan. Sour cream jumbles are delicious to serve with iced tea on the porch, to pack in the picnic basket or use with ice cream or fresh fruit for des sert. Sour Cream Jumbles Four tablespoons butter, one cup sugar, one egg, one-half cup sour cream, three cups flour, one-half teaspoon soda, one-quarter teaspoon salt, one teaspoon vanilla, one-half cup shredded coocanut. Cream butter and sugar. Add egg beaten well and sour cream. Mix thoroughly. Mix and sift flour, salt and soda and add to first rpixture with cocoanut and vanilla. Mix thoroughly and chill. Roll on a floured board making the dough about one-fourth Inch thick. Cut with a doughnut cutter and bake ten minutes in a moderately hot oven. j Sour Cream Pie One cup sour cream, two eggs (yolks), one-half cup sugar, one cup seeded and chopped raisins, one-half cup chopped apple, one tablespoon flour, one-eighth teaspoon salt, onehalf teaspoon cinnamon. Beat yolks well. Mix and sift sugar, flour, salt and cinnamon. Stir into cream and add to yolks. Add raisins and apple and turn into an unbaked pie shell. Bake in a hot oven for ten minutes. Then reduce heat and bake thirty to forty minutes In a moderate oven. Cover with a meringue made with the whites of the eggs and four tablespoons sugar. Bake meringue fifteen minutes in a slow oven. Sour Cream Cake One and one-half cups sugar, three eggs, one cup cream, one-half teaj spoon soda, one teaspoon baking powder one scant teaspoon salt, one teaspoon vanilla, two and one-half cups flour. Beat yolks of eggs until thick and lemon colored, gradually beating in sugar, which has been sifted twice. Add vanilla. Mix and sift flour, making powder and salt and add alternately with cream in which soda has been dissolved. Beat until perfectly smooth and fold in whites of eggs beaten until stilt and dry. Bake In two layers or as a loaf cake. Bake In a moderate oven for forty-five minutes if baked in a ldaf and bake thirty minutes in layers. CHAMELEON GEM MADRAS—A strange new gem has been found, the value of which experts have not been able to determine. It was discovered as part of a necklace of a maharajah which was auctioned off. The Jewel shows a rosy tint in daytime, but changes to royal blue at night. 9 tonight take &IKlok-Lax Lot-'constipation *
J r TjU<ry~ A STORY OF •A GIRL, of TODAY JOANS MYSTERIOUS BROTHER “Who is your attorney?" Jerry asked Joan. "Mr. Josiah Elkins." Jerry nodded his head in approval as he repeated the name of one of the oldest and most respected of Chicago lawyers. “He was my mother’s attorney,” she further explained. "After mother died it was decided that he should take care of my interest as well as my brother’s, while my stepfather, Mr. Robinson, took his affairs to another attorney.” Jerry looked rather surprised at Joan’s mention of her brother and he remarked that he had never heard of him. I, too, looked up with interest, because Joan had never told me anything about her brother except to mention him in the most casual way the first night I met her. From this I had gathered some way that no one knew him, that he ■was never seen in the home. However, I had supposed he was away at school. I knew that there was some mystery connected with him, and I was not particularly surprised when I found Joan telling Jerry her brother was a hopeless cripple. “My brother and I are twins," she said. "I am about an hour older, I have been told, and everybody was delighted when I was born, because I was what you would call “a splendid baby.” John —we were named Joan and John by my mother —is a cripple. He lives the year around In his camp in the Adirondacks." "Yes," Interrupted Jerry. “I have heard about your milllon-dollar camp up there, but I had no idea that it was a home foA your brother.” “My mother was very sensitive about my brother's infirmities and she started to build the camp just after'he was born. She spared nothing that money could buy to make it a. most luxurious home for her son, to whom she had imparted the same sensitiveness about himself that she had about him. He ne\er wants to see anyone, especially a woman.” “I have tried many times to make him come out into the world, and I have always spent two months of every year with him. Really I have seen many people who were worse cripples than he who seemed unconsciousness that they were objects of pity and were very happy. “John has a wonderful mind, and of course he has had the best tutors and companions that money could buy for him, but they have all been men with the exception of his old nurse, who adores him. Besides she and myself not another womp has ever been at the camp. He has had all sorts of athletic training and with the exception of one leg, which is shorter than the other and a withered arm, he is perhaps the most splendid looking boy I have ever seen." (Copyright, 1926. By NEA Service.) NEXT—.Joan Explains.
Clubs and Sororities
Tuesday Mrs. O. E. Green, 2225 Broadway, entertained the Service Star Legion, Hamilton-Berry chapter this afternoon. The members of the Brighter Prospect Club met today at the Madison Ave. branch library. The Marion County chapter of the American War Mothers met at the headquarters on N. Pennsylvania St., this afternoon. Wednesday The monthly meeting of the Sigma Delta Tau sorority will be held at the Lincoln, Wednesday evening. Mrs. Robert Doyle, 504 West Drive Woodruff Place, will be hostess for the meeting of the Owl Club, Wednesday a't 7:30 p. m. Golden Rule Lodge 25, will entertain with cards at the lodge hall, 1002 E. Washington St., Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. , Fidelity Review, 140 Woman's Relief Association will give a public card party at Castle .Hall, 230 E. Ohio St., Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. Florence Shinn is chairman. The regular meeting of the Delta Tau sorority will be held Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Mildred McGlinchey, 1643 Lexington Ave. The Alpha chapter of the Sigma Delta Zeta sorority will meet Wednesday evening at the home of Miss Sophia Zinkan, 409 Sanders St. Thursday The Seymour Social Club will picnic Thursday at Brookside Park. Members will meet at the end of the East Tenth car line. The Swastika Club will meet Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Verna McMurrer, 726 Manhattan Ave. Friday The Cedars of Lebanon will go to the home of Mrs. C. F. Rinehardt, near Greenfield, for an all-day meeting next Friday.
A Tonic Os RareMilue In Childhood SCOTT’S EMULSION Abounds In Health -Build iry , Vitamins Stott A Bomb, BtosatfckCW J. >6-4
THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL WEAPONS IS RIDICULE
Yes, the sword is mighty. And the pen is mightier than the sword. But mightier than these two put together is—ridicule.
And most of the folks who go about preaching Bolshevism, or do any other thing from little to large in order to attract attention are the people who can’t stand ridicule even in small quantities. They think they’ve won their cause when they arouse people to rebellion, or get them fighting mad about it. But oh, how it hurts to be ignored, or made fun of! And what a clever weapon ridicule has been in the hands of Italy's Mussolini, who knows better than most that the sword is not the mightiest weapon to employ and who has marched to victory over his live enemies—not his dead ones. And they tell of him that all his enemies, rich or poor, great or small! fared alike. When they rebelled, when they sought to hurt him politically or personally, when the Bolshevists sought to wrest Italy from him he saw that each one received his punishment, which was a large glass of castor oil! And when, days later, they emerged from . their respective dwellings, pale and wan and having had a good long time 1 to think over their rebellion, they were met by jeers and laughter of an amused populace at this novel method of punishment, and ridicule was more than they could bear. There's no heroism about being a martyr to castor oil! How About a Dose? Dear Miss Lea: I am very much in need or your advice as my husband flirts when we are out together. This is very dis(rusting to me. I do not trust or respect him any more and my love is not tire same as when I married him over a year ago. Now. Miss Lee. I am not the horse and buggy type. I am considered attractive. drese modestly. but stylish, and wear my clothes well. Have spoken to him twice about it in a nice way. He says I am jealous and that I ought to be clad he did no worse. He is 28 years, old enough to act like a man. I (eel that I could not have children for him although he speaks of having one some time. I nope you can ten me what to do to break him of this habit. MRS. E. M. How about Mussolini’s ' method? That would take all the flirtatiousness out of him for a while! You see he’s the bulfy type that enjoys making folks foam at the mouth. He probably gets quite a ‘/kick" out of making you jealous and miserable. So for goodness’ sake don’t give him that satisfaction. If you can’t make him ridiculous, which would undoubtedly break him of his habit in a jiffy, then ignore his antics. This is a game that two can play, but it isn’t wise to draw some one else into a domestic tangle just to straighten out the tangle when you could do it yourself. Take him as a large joke. I'll tell you a good way to break him! Oooch! I'd hate to have it. worked on me! Make out a pasteboard placard without hubby's knowledge of course, on whifh in large black! letters Is written something like this; “You Hoc Folks! I’m from Foolstown!” Then, if you can pin it to him without his catching on—like a naughty boy would do—he’ll go parading around flirting with the girls who will be
She f s Hall-Mills Witness
V
Barbara Tough, former personal maid to Mrs. Frances Hall, trips forth smilingly after fresh sparring with Special Prosecutor Alexander Simison over her testimony in the HaUs-MiOs ease.
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AUG. 10, 1926
Martha Lee Saya-
laughing at him this time. And when he finds ou: that their smiles were not for his handsome face, but for the ridiculous placard on his back, he’s Quite likely not to be seen again in public for some time, and the next he does go out he’ll be rather discreet. Os course, if lie finds out it’s your triqk he won't be pleasant about it —that’s your job to keep him from finding out. Then you’ll always have a cudgel of laughter with which to knock the flirt.atiousness out of him: “Oh, yea, remember the time—” Sweet Sixteen Dear Miss Lee: lam 10 and have been sroing steady with a fellow of the same ago for four months. He sems to care a great deal for me. but the other day he brought two other girls with him. I go out with another fellow once in awhile. Both fellows show me a good tire, but I enjov being with the former one the best. The other fellow is a good pal and is nothing more than a brother to roe. Must I quit the cotnpanionship of one for 'he other? And too. fellows who know nothing about me have started some talk which hurts my pride. What can I do to stoo this? RENO. Ignore it as not worthy of your consideration. You only attract attention not only to yourself but to the scandal or talk when you let it bother you enough to fisfht\about it. Contempt is the only attitude to take toward it. Don’t give up either of the boys. Asa matter of fact, you are not old enough to go “steady” with any one, much less let green-eyed monster come betwelfl you and a nice boy’s friendship What if he goes out with other girls? That’s no disgrace to you. And you have other boy friends, too. SOCKS? NO, NO! LONDON—Fashion in the public schools here decrees that young men will no longer show their fancy socks, even when sitting down. This i3 the outcome of the long collegiate style of trousers.
August Fur Sale HIGHLIGHTS AT WOKLFELD’S A SPECIAL VALUE FOR WEDNESDAY
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The magic wonder of this August Fur Sale is its low prices and unusual qualities. •Tomorrow we are featuring a Silver Muskrat Coat, made of select skins. A wonderful value at — s l7s°° JACOB WOKLFEID FUR COMPANY 437 Occidental Bldg.
Buy TOUR Wearing Apparel on the AMERICAN BUDGET and TWENTY, PAYMENT, PLANI ,J*V*T S 'S3* I * 25-00 *1.25 Sa*Vsoso *250 •™7T'VJ\TtSoo *175 • 13100.00 tfi.oo THE STORE fc> East Ohio ll
