Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 114, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

What Price Wives Who Hold Jobs? BY OIJVE ROBERTS BARTON A writer pens this remark: “The great danger of women working outside of the home and keeping up her home duties as well, is that the male will get to expect it, and eventually all males will continue to expect it. They will take it as a matter of course and women won’t dare stop.” Very well. How about this? I heard two women talking the other day. One was protesting a suggestion the other had made about a foursome holiday. “I don’t think we can go,” said No. 1. “Jim thinks it’s foolish to spend money on hotels the way they charge, and we’d be gone three days!" “For goodness sake! Don’t be a custard pie,” said No. 2. “Why don’t you let Jim spend a little money on you? Get him into the habit. I take everything Dick can beg or scrape for me and look for more. The more you expect the mere you’ll get,” I know a woman who has a fine position as personnel manager in a store. Ten years ago she was cleaning her windows and washing her dishes in fabric dresses. Her winter coat cost SSO and lasted two years. Their summer vacatioy consisted of three weeks on a farm in fruit season, and putting up enough stuff to last through the winter. Now she wears dresses of material with no equivalent in English. Her summer and winter furs set her back about a thousand dollars a year. She has hats, shoes and lingerie in keeping, and perfume at S2O an ounce. She has a car. Their vacations include everything from Hawaii to Europe. Her husband still buys two suits a year, walks to work, eats three meals a day and sleeps in the bed he always slept in. And he sleeps well. He gets little more out of all his wife’s increased income than peace.. But he surely does thank heaven for that!

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE—The Times will give $1 tor each recipe submitted bv a reader ad- * Judged of sufficient merit to be printed 'n this column. One recipe is printed dally, except Friday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Prizes will be mailed to winners. Write on one side of sheet only. Only one recipe each week will be accepted from one person. V Raisine Squeeze the juice from very ripe sound grapes and boil with onefourth pound of sugar to each pint of Juice, until reduced about half. Peel, core and slice good ripe pears, put them in the grape juice and boil until pears are well done. Pack in sterilized jars and seal tight. Mrs. Laura B. Lawson, R. R. 1, Box 7, ShelbyviJle, Ind.

Family Menus

BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—ChiIIed apple sauce cereal, cooked with dates, cream, minced lamb on toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Vegetable soup, toast sticks, orange bread and cream cheese sandwiches, curly endive with French dressing, rice and apple pudding, milk, tea. DINNER—Boiled mutton, mashed turnips, casserole of summer squash with corn and tomatoes, pears in chocolate sauce, milk coffee. Orange Bread One cake compressed yeast, V\ cup lukewarm water, 3 oranges, 4 tablespoons sugar, cup candied Orange peel, 2 teaspoons grated orange rind, Vi teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons melted butter, Vi cup chopped nut meats, 2% cups white bread flour, 1 cup whole wheat flour, yoke of 1 egg. Use water which has been boiled and cooled to lukewarm temperature. Dissolve yeast cake in water. Add orange juice, sugar, salt, grated orange rind, candied orange peel finely chopped, melted butter, egg yoke and nuts. Mix well and add whole wheat flour. Mix well and add white flour using only enough flour to handle. Knead on a floured molding board until the dough is smooth and bubbly. Place in a warm bowl, cover with a clean cloth put in a warm place and let rise until double in bulk. Shape into loaf, put into a bettered bread pan and let rise again. When double in bulk, bake one hour in a hot oven. County Convention The Madison County W. C. T. U. convention was held today at the East Main Street Christian Church in Elwood, with Mrs. C. C. Carroll of Elwood, president, presiding. The program opened at 10 a. m. and during the day there were talks by members from Anderson and Alexandria. Brown Season This is to be a brown autumn and winter, apparently. But the browns take on such reddish autumnal hues that they are very live colors. Ostrich Trimming A deep rose velvet hat with a flaring, octagonal shaped brim, has a long, uncurled ostrich feather under the back and side brim.

Exclusive Christmas Cards Now displayed at Junior League Shop or by appointment in your home Phone Lin. 8067 ISB East Fourteenth

FLYING BORES EQUESTRIENNE

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Mile. Dorange, en route on “La Huppe” from Paris to Berlin, receives the well-wishes of a passerby.

BY MINOTTSAUNDERS NEA Service Writer PARIS, Sept. 21—In these days when many adventurous women are taking to the air for thrills, Mile. Dorange, known as the “most beautiful horsewoman in France,” prefers to go back to the good old days. She finds her adventure galloping along lonely roads. “Flying is wearisome and motoring is monotonous,” she says. “I would rather ride a horse than do either. Riding provides plenty of action and romance if you only go after them. I like roaming about, taking long rides across country in the good old way.” Mile. Dorange has just completed a horseback ride from Paris to Berlin. She made the entire journey alone with her thoroughbred Arab

Another’s Faith Often Points Way to Success BY MARTHA LEE Unconsciously we all try to live up to what other people—especially those nearest and dearest—think of us. It’s mighty easy to establish the inferiority complex in the minds of others, and it’s not so edsy,' but possible to do exactly the opposite. Many a man, for instance, whose wife thoroughly believed in him, has stepped from mediocrity into success, from careless, dissolute ways into straight and honorable living because she established a faith to himelf.

And many a man has testified that he reached far into the world because he had a mother’s unswerving faith in his ability and powers to do so. Parents would do well to think on this. What they say and what thoughts they hold about their children are felt and have their tremendous influence. The mother, who says (in Tommy’s presence) "I can’t do thing with Tommy,” deserves to have much of the trouble with him that she is almost certain to have. Cannot Control Him Dear Martha Lee: I am much troubled about my son. who is 16 years old. He dislikes his school very much in Indianapolis and, in (act, has not liked to go to school at all here. He has always been very hard to manage and now he has taken a crazy idea that he wants to go to military school. He has a sum of money left him by his grandmother and if I wanted to I could evote that, as he wants me to. to his going away, but I don’t know what to do. [e doesn’t listen to hardly anything I say and some folks tell me that the military school would be awfully good training for him. as they can see how hard he is to do anything with and I am afraid as he gets older, he may get In trouble as he is so headstrong. MRS. R. R. I believe I agree with your friends that this might be a good plan. Evidently, you have convinced the boy, as you yourself are convinced, that you have little influence over him. Growing into young manhood with that conviction held over him might indeed result in discord, so if you can easily do so, let him have the training you speak of. I think It is money well spent.

BRIDGE ME ANOTHER (Copyright, 1927, by The Ready Reference Publishing Company.) BY W. W. WENTWORTH

...(Abbreviations:. .A—ace; .K—king:. Q— queen: J—Jack; A—any card lower than 10.) 1. First hand bids one spade. Second hand passes. Third hand passes. Fourth hand bids two clubs. First hand bids two spades. Second hand bids three clubs. Third hand bids three hearts. Has third hand denied partner’s suit? 2. Score being frame to frame, what do you bid when you holddiamonds—A K Q J 10 9; hearts—X; spades—A X; clubs—J X X X? 3. When you hold A Q, how many times is the suit stopped? The Answers 1. NO. 2. One diamond. 3. At least once. Twice if you can lead through the K to the Q. Wed Here Monday Miss Ruth Ward, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. J. S. Ward of Connersville, and Kenneth Hayden, were married Monday at Meridian Street M. E. Church. They were classmates at De Pauw University. After the ceremony the 'couple left for the west where they will live. Lecture at Marion Mrs. Blanche Chenoweth, 1713 Talbott lectured on “Dress" today at Marion under the auspices of the Gen. Francis Marion chapter D.*A. R. The meeting of the chapter to open tm season will be held Friday.

steed, La Huppe, in what she describes as leisurely laps of from twenty-five to forty miles a day. Her route took her through Spa, Brussels and The Hague. Mile. Dorange uses the Lindbergh “we,” saying, “We just jogged along as we pleased, stopped where we wished and were blissfully happy together in the open country with the beauty and fragrance of nature.” The fair rider carried the smallest possible amount of luggage, but this included an evening robe and slippers, a complete toilet set, and a revolver. With her chic riding clothes, derby hat and jewelled stick, she appeared and carried herself as much the thoroughbred as La Huppe. She is now planning other long journeys, and she insists upon making them alone. She doesn’t want any spirited knight with her.

Beatrice Batty Gives Shower for Fall Bride Miss Beatrice Batty entertained at her home, 5010 Carrollton Ave., Tuesday evening with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Margaret Schoener, whose marriage to Walter Carpenter Hiser will take place on Oct. 1. The decorations and appointments were carried out in the bride’s colors, shades of pink and rose- Those with the guest of honor were: Mesdames Maxwell Schoener B. E. Neal Scott Hiser Frank Currv, D. R. Batty Los Angeles, Cal. Misses Marlfranees Ogle Lucille Tyner Kathleen Hottel Helena Sleloff Madeline Byrket Dorothy L. Thomas Marthalou Schoener Maurlne Jaoulth Virginia Curtis Wilma Dunkle Dorothy Spooner Dorotha Weaver Katherine Reagan WOMEN SCIENTISTS MORE NUMEROUS By United Press LONDON, Sept. 21.—Women scientist are steadily increasing in numbers, declared the secretary of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Explaining the rapid strides made by women in realm of science, the secretary said, “When the British association was founded in 1831, and for some years afterward, women were not admitted to join in the discussions. Now there is no sex bar, and women not only take part in the discussions, but are also equally eligible with men for office.” This year the Duchess of Athell was president of the education section, and women read papers on a variety of subjects including psychology botany, zoology, anthropology, economics, physiology, agriculture and geography.

EMERALDS

A huge emerald, set in a diamond neckline, with matching bracelet and ring, form the latest and most stylish of evening ensembles of real jewels.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

If Woman Had Used “Choose ” BY ALLENE SUMNER With all the shouting and the tumult continuing about our president's use of the word “chuose,” one wonders if comment wouldn't have had a meaner slant if a woman public official had issued so veiled and ambiguous a statement. Ftom a male official it means diplomacy, tact, caution, shrewdness. From a woman governor or president it would mean “just li.ee a woman,” carelessness, inexactness, error.

His Ears Girls, watch a man's ears if you want to know him! Pirie MacDonald, who has photographed all the world’s famous men, says that if a man’s ear lobes are prominent, he has ability and sex appeal. If they are not discernible, he is rather a total loss. Caveman Stuff “Woman is a mere parenthesis In a man’s life; she is important only in that she is female.” From Mussolini comes this red flag for the girls. And women adore him, we are told. Italian women are rallying to the flag of Fascism Just to hear and see and be known to II Duce. For say what you like and want what you want, there is something basic in men and women which makes men choose to dominate and most wome l choose to have them dominan^ Alimony Ails The game of alimony is ridiculed and analyzed the best I have ever seen or heard by Rebecca West in a current magazine article entitled “The Confusion Which Is This Life.” Miss West believes that alimony for women is socially taken for granted because of lies that have been told about men and vomen and sex and marriage for countless centuries. Lie One There is first, the lie of sex, “Men,” writes Miss West “to make thAiselves, the strong, primitive, interesting half of humanity, have pretended that they had the monopoly of sexual emotions. To this many women pretended to agree and then, naturally, insisted on having their relations with their husbands regarded as painful obligations which they fulfilled only out of a sense of duty, and for which they could not be too handsomely rewarded.” More Lies Sex lies, continues Miss West, have made women believe that they age sooner than men, that their years of I desirability are brief and that, these -1 fore, such men as have them in holy matrimony for “the best years of her life” must pay heavily for them. Thin there is the “you are so much stronger and more capable than I” lie on the part of women, meaning that, “surely you can’t expect me to ean* my living as you do!” The answer to this, along with alimony, is that w’omen are paid less in the labor market by men, because with their o-vn mouths they have admitted their incompetence, says Miss West. Kappa Party Nu chapter alumnae association of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will give a bridge party Saturday afternoon at the chapter house in Irvington for the benefit of the house furnishing fund. At the same time the finals in the bridge tournament of last year will be played off. The winners to play are Miss Mildred Johns, Mrs. Guernsey Van Riper, Mrs. D. Maurice Stephenson and Mrs. Frederick C. Albershadt. Reservations for the party should be made with Miss Katharine Lennox, 2413 N. Delaware St. Faculty Tea The faculty of the Indianapolis Teachers’ College entertained at Lea Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lois Grosevnor Hufford in honor of her eighty-second birthday. She has been a member of the faculty for many years. Assisting were Miss Elizabeth Means, Mrs. Alice Goss and Mrs. Harlowe Hyde. Mrs. Hufford will talk on Shakespeare at the chapel Thursday morning. Wedding Invitations Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur F. Kellum of Camby have issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Esther, to Douglas V. Sherow, which takes place at the home of the bride at 8 p. m., Oct. 1. Play Euchre The Social Club of Sacred Heart will have a euchre party at 2:30 Thursday afternoon at the hall on Union St. Miss Carr to Wed Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Carr, 610 Riley St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Lorene, to Joseph L. Roseman. The wedding will take place at the Little Flower Church at 8 a. m., Nov. 16. Trio Club The Trio Club will give a card party at South Side Turner Hall at 8:30 p. m. Thursday. Plaid Lining A rich purple velour coat has a lavender and purple plaid kasha lining which turns up to form the hem, cuffs, collar and revers.

PERMANENT WAVE Circuline tfj Q A A Method ePO.UU PAUL’S BEAUTY SHOP 331 111. Bldg. Phone Main 6303

EVANS' At All Gt'cers . .

COLORFUL TOUCHES THAT COUNT

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Little touches of bright color count amazingly in the atmosphere of coziness and charm which they lend to a room. Where it is desirable to have a preponderance of rather quiet tones, there should nevertheless be a few vivid notes to prevent a too-sombre asspect. By painting or enameling the small accessories la a room in strong shades of green, yollow, orange, blue or Chinese red, this happy effect s easily attained. A set of bookshelves, a magazine rack, a window 7 box, shelves for holding bric-a-brac or tea things, a wood-box, a wallniche devised to hold a small statue or other object of art—any of these small furnishings, if given a vivid color, will add interest to tsie dullest room. For instance, in a room of dark

Asserts Prejudice Halts Women in Medical World

By Times Special NEW YORK. Sept. 21.—Baseless prejudice on the part of male doctors, the public at large, and even feminist leaders, is wrecking the careers of hundreds of girl medical graduates, and depriving America of the services of possible thousands of able physicians and medical scientists who might be recruited for humanity’s common war on disease. Such is the accusation made by Dr. Jane Normandie, one of the country’s leading pathologists and perhaps its foremost woman medical specialist. Dr. Normandie, who saw service ..

under fire as a commissioned medical officer with the American army in France, declares that woman’s potentialities in the medical field sre on a par with those of man. “Men have dominated the medical world for so many centuries that most of them have come "to regard it as their own property,” 6he derlares, “and to look upon women who enter it as unworthy, and actually 83 interlopers. This prejudice is real and a woman is forced to combat it from the day she enters medical school. “The public is lined up on the side of the men doctors. If a young woman and a young man graduate with equal honors from a medical school, serve in the same hospital for a year or two and then open offices in the same block, the man will get eight out of every ten patients. “Women who are leaders in the feminist movement are as bad as the men doctors in perpetuating the age-old prejudices. Women who demand that women be given every consideration in the field of business will shun the young woman doctor.” The young woman today who enters a medical school must expect to combat the disdain of her male coworkers throughout her course, she declares, relating her own experiences as a student at Johns Hopkins Medical School from which she was graduated with honors . “My classmates were gentlemen and chivalrous in everything except the work we did in the classrooms and clinics. There, in many ways they made it plain that I was an intrudsr and an interloper. But then prejudice was mild to what I encountered when I entered the Baltimore Hospital to serve my interneship?’ The girl who enters the medical field today, the article concludes, must be prepared "to fight for twen-ty-five or possibly fifty years before the prejudice can be erased.”

CUFF DETAIL

A georgette afternoon frock has a bracelet of rhinestone sewed on \ one sleeve.

\ Friday Minimum Bundle * S * tUrd,y Only 51.01 Economical Satisfactory /„ Ideal for the family 02i7 with school children Progress ihrMrfS) laundry 430 EAST MARKET STREET Every kind of cleanuig service

greens and greys, a vivid dash of Chinese red, applied in the form of paint or enafnel to some small piece of wooden furniture, will gleam forth like a jewel, and will lend to this rather subdued room a sudden, delightful aspect of elfin gaiety. Where taupe and mulberry supply the color scheme, a few brilliant bits of yellow or orange are a positive necessity. In aj setting of tan walls and golden-brown upholstery, scatter touches of jade green, through the medium of painted window-boxes, a lacquered magaziine rack or corner shelves for bric-a-brac. Then whole room will be magically enlivened. Good taste may demand the choice of a conservative scheme of decoration; but remember—it is the colorful touches that count!

Miss Shepard to Be Honored With Parties

Miss Evelyn Barnes, 3505 Washington Blvd., will entertain with a luncheon Thursday at the Woodstock Club in honor of Miss Elizabeth Shepard .whose marriage to Rudolph K. Haerle will take place Sept. 28. Mrs. John James Cooper and Miss Mary Florence Malott entertained with a luncheon party today at the Woodstock Club for Miss Shepard and Miss Constance Stanton entertained Tuesday afternoon at her home, 4421 Central Ave., with a bridge party. Miss Mary Elizabeth Powell will entertain with a dinner bridge on Thursday for Miss Shepard and Friday evening Malcolm Jilson and William Kothe will entertain at dinner. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Shafer and Miss Ada Payne will entertain at dinner Saturday evening and Tuesday Mr. and Mrs. Shepard will entertain with the bridal dinner at Woodstock for their daughter and Mr. Haerle. Attendants at the wedding will be Miss Helen Shepard, sister of the bride-elect, maid of honor; the Misses Evelyn Barnes, Ada Payne, Mary Elizabeth Powell and Mary Florence Malott, bridesmaids; little Emmy Jean Haerle, flower girl; Louis Haerle, best man, and Malcolm Jillson, William Kothe. Hillis Howie and William Jungclaus, ushers. Mrs. Platt Hostess Mrs. Harold Irving Platt, 3936 Central Ave., entertained at luncheon bridge today in honor of Mrs. Leonard A. Murchison of Chicago, who is visiting here. The guests were seated at one table, the centerpiece of which was a bouquet of poppies lighted at either end with tapers in silver holders. Covers were laid for: Mesdames E. R. Glldehaus Louis Robert Markum Harold Pierce Sydney Mabalourtz Marvin H. Weisman Joseph Davidson Louise Flnkelstein The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Finkelsteim Evening Purse Diamante spins a gleaming spider’s web for decoration on a flesh moire envelope purse for evening. A diamante handle adds allure. Silver Spangles A lavender chiffon evening gown has its snug hipline girdled With matching satin and its bolero and flounced skirt spangled in silver.

SCHLOSSERS GfejjffißvE (fresh Ch urned from fresh Cfean

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- D 5 9 33 tern No. a* Size • ••••••••••'a ••••••••••••§•••••• • Name ••••••■••••a***•••••••••••••••• • Street A •#•••••••••••••••••••••••••*•• • City

A COMFORTABLE FROCK 5933. Checked woolen and plaid, as well as wash materials are suitable for this design. The pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 2,3, 4 and 6 years. To make the dress for a 3 year size with long sleeves, will require 1% yards of 27-inch material together with 14-yard of contrasting material for facings on cuffs, belt and pockets. If made with short sleeves 1% yards of 27inch material is required.

I mA 5933

Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week.

Life’s Niceties Hints on Etiquet

1. In writing a business letter, is it necessary to write the name and address of the recipient before you begin your letter? 2. Which is better, “Dear Sir” or “My Dear Mr. So-and-So?” 3. Why? The Answers 1. Yes. 2. It is better to address him by name. 3. It is more personal and, even in the business world, a personal touch is winning. LITERARY CLUB HAS “PIONEER” MEETING The Multum in Parvo literary club met Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. W. F. Holmes, 1040 Keystone Ave. Mrs. Harold Trusler president, presented the club with linen stationery embossed in gold. Mrs. Ernest W. Fullenwider read a paper'' on “Indiana in the Beginning,” and responses to roll call were stories of pioneer life. At tea time the tables were decorated with illustrations of pioneer life and the centerpiece was a miniature log cabin. The place cards were pioneer women and the Ices were in the club emblem, the lamp of knowledge. Western Alumnae Western College alumnae will hold their first meeting of the year Saturday at 3 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Alma Rogers, Penn-Arts Apts., Sixteenth and Pennsylvania Sts. Party at Park Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mess and Mr. and Mrs. George Mess of the Circle ArJ; Academy motored with their students to Forest Park Sunday for a weiner roast and swimming party.

WOMEN APPROACHING MIDDLE AGE Pass Through This Trying Period in Good Condition by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound

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MRS. HARVEY TUCKER IV. N. t. •HKLBYVIU.K. IND. "Grow old along with me, The beat is yet to be 1 * With her children grown up, the middle-aged'woman finds time to do the things she never bad time to do before —read the new books, see the new plays, enjoy her grandchildren, take ah active part in church and civic affairs. Far from being pushed aside by the younger set, she finds a full, rich life of her own. That is, if her health Is good. Thousanis of women of middle age. say they owe their vigor and health to Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Those who hare

SEPT. 21,1927| 7

Greatness , Simplicity ' Ideal Link ______ j BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON I was talking not long ago to 4 pioneer woman of the west. Shi had left her home when she wa* very young and with her husband and two small children had traveled into unpeopled lands. There she had endured great hardships and lived for many years without the material comforts of life. To her friends she was a remarkable woman, brave, undaunted* hopeful and unafraid. However, when she had finished reading a eulogy dedicated to) pioneer mothers and wives, this is what she said: “But surely we were never so won* derful as that. We came to this country when it was new just as alj wives go into strange places with their husbands. We were very likd all other women. We faced each dad as it came. It was not so hard a (f it sounds, because there were mansf joys and compensations for all deprivations.’ Simplicity of the Great There you have the simple stor4 of greatness. The women of ths west who stuck were heroines to us* who have so much easier lives. And yet the quality that made therfl noble can also ennoble us. Thejj merely faced the duties that camtf with each sunrise, and no great maif ( has ever done more. For greatness is to be found iif out of the way places as well as oi< the battlefields of the world. The| women who went into the unfriendly wilderness might have lost theif courage if they could have looked into the future. Many of them did lose their health, hundreds laid down their lives, while scores suffered that deepest tragedy, thsj breakdown of mind, because of thq awful loneliness. Prepare for Struggle Today women need not face suclf physical hardships or such a ghastly monotony of days, but each of u must expect her Apolyon who must be fought to the death. And thq only way to combat this spiritual enemy is to gird one’s self for batUa with each new dawn. The example of the pioneer woman who was astonished to find herself a heroine is one that wa might all do well to follow. Until we are great enough to face today s duties with courage, we may neve? expect to become heroines. i j Shower, Bunco Honors Bride of October Miss Josephine Hedden, 784 Middle Dr., Woodruff Place, entertained with a miscellaneous shower and six ' tables of bunco Tuesday avening for Miss Helen .shebler, who will be married Oct. 5 to William Hohn, Jr. The appointments were in orchid and green. The guests were: Mesdames Rov Cunningham Edward Kenninger Thomas Riley Edward Timberlake Lois Brand Carl Slogans George Vawter - Misses Carol Kenninger Jean Burnside Alma Brehot Alice Hildebrand Mildred Shebler Freda Hohn Thelma Griffith Frances Lloyd Clara English Sarah Bernstein Alma Meyer Dimple Stalcup Marie Schlensker Audrey Rathske Gretchen Ferguson Mrs. French to Convention Mrs.. Alice M. French will go to Milwaukee Saturday to attend the national convention of the American War Mothers, Sept. 27 to Oct. 1. The convention will be preceded by a board of directors meeting Monday. Mrs. French is a life member. On Saturday of this week Mrs. Thomas Spence, chairman of the national convention, will entertain the board members at dinner. Founders’ day will be celebrated Thursday when Mrs. French will make an address.

r A Delicious Dressing for x FISH 3 parts hot melted butter, 1 part LEA & PERRINS’ 4 SAUCE J

learned through their own expert* ence the merit of this dependable medicine are enthusiastic in recommending it to tbeir friends and neighbors. “I had been in bad condition fori three months. I could not do my) work. One day I read what your medicine had done and just had a feeling that it would help me, so 0 sent and got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I had only taken half a bottle when I got up anil started to do my work. It gave me an. appetite, and helped me wonderfully. I can not praisa this medicine highly enough. £ surely will advise all women and girls to take it, and they don’t have to use rouge to look healthy. My) two daughters are taking it now and one is also using the Sanative Wash. I am willing to have you use this testimonial and I will answer letters from women asking about tha medicine."— Mbs. Habvey Tcckeb, R. R. No. 9, Shelbyville, Indiana. “I read about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in the little books you give away and began to take the medicine. After the first few bottles I began to feel better and could eat better and had fewen headaches. I feel like a different person. At anytime that I don’t feel good I take the Vegetable Compound again, as I always keep a bottle on hand. You may use this letter for every word Is true. I-will answer any letters sent to me.”—Mas. Jewnie Boixkbmaw, 611-1 1th St., Union City, N, ,L