Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 305, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1928 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Wife of Traveling Man Who Doesn’t Make Trips Alone Asks ‘What to Do?’ BY MARTHA LEE EYEN Dice clothes and children can not compsensate—even the fact that wishes are granted can not make up for the terrible humiliation of knowing that while one was loving and trusting him one’s husband was spending all of liis time away from home with another woman. Not that this is unusual, but in spite of the stories to the effect that “once there was a traveling salesman” there are not

many of them who take women with them on their trips. When the wife is tied down with children, the husband reasonably indulgent, though gone most of the time and apparently happy when at home, it must be a rude awakening to find that his goodness must be at least partly conciliatory. A woman in a situation of this sort has asked my advice. First of all, I should try to find out if I had not in some way failed my husband, if there was not some reason for his having turned to some one else. Having looked at the thing from all angles and at myself as unsparingly as possible, I should make my decision. If I had fallen down in some way and except for this unfortunate habit of carting about a traveling companion—for •which I should be at least partly responsible if I found myself lacking —he was worth holding, I-should try to correct my faults and win him ' back. Otherwise, I should divorce him at once, see that he did his share in taking care of the children and set about supporting myself. * Pride leaves no other course When one has done one’s best, except the cheap and self-damaging form of retaliating with the same sort of behavior. That is my answer to Unhappy Mother. — —— Dear Martha Lee: I am the mother of two darling little girls. I have been married four years. My husband Is a traveling salesman and Is very seldom home with his little family. We got along just fine until I found that he takes another girl on every trip with him. I am 26 and he Is 27. He sends me all the money I ask for. I have nice clothes and so do my children. Miss Lee. what would you advise me to do. Thanks. AN UNHAPPY MOTHER. Dear Miss Lee: Please answe the following questions: 1. Should a girl hold a fellow’s arm or should he hold hers? 2. Should a girl kiss a fellow good night? 3. Is it proper to accept gifts from boys ""you do not go with steady? 4. How is an interesting way to start a conversation. BABE. Babe: It is not necessary to hold each other’s arms at all, except that your friend may help you at a crossing by putting his hand on your elbow or by taking hold of your arm lightly. To walk down the street with either of you holding on to the other is exceedingly bad taste. The question of kissing a man good night has many angles. If he wants, you to kiss him, just to pay for having shown you a good time, don’t do it. Girls who have high ideals and are really the right sort, do not kiss boys at all, even good night. However, if you have known the young man for a long time and have been going with him to the exclusion of almost everyone else, and really want to kiss him, it would seem quite all right for you to do it. A goofi-night kiss is not a crime, but if I were you I would not give one to every young man who takes you anywhere. Flowers, candy and books are acceptable gifts from any young men friends, but jewelry or any other gifts are barred as gifts from men except from the one to whom you are engaged. Surely you and your friends have some activity in common. Have you seen an especially good movie or show? Have you read a magazine article which you particularly liked? or anew book? And what about the itneresting things people have done that you read about in the papers. Ask your friends their views about the Bremen flight, or right now a subject dear to the heart of every Hoosier, politics.

Prize Recipes by Readers

NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily, 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 persoc Easter Lfly Cake Two cups cups flour, six teaspoons baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt, two cups milk, four stifly beaten egg whites, one teaspoon vanilla. Sift the baking powder, salt, sugar, and flour twice in a mixing bowl. Scald the milk and beat into the sifted ingredients. Then fold into the egg whites. Bake in three layers. Cover with white frosting. MRS. EDNA WILKERSON. 104 S. Elder Ave., City.

THE CONNOISSEUR

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With a spirit full of gravity and grim determination Mr. Van de View is going in for mental stimulation— Jteientiflc tracts and histories—philosophy md all— lot of books, enough to last Hbim till the fall,

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- D C 1 O O tern No. 1)0 1 44 Size Name •••••••••••••••••••••• Street City ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A

JJ ad.

A DAINTY PARTY OR DANCE FROCK FOR A LITTLE* GIRL 86122. Crepe de chine, voile, chiffon, taffeta or mull may be used for this pleasing model. The pattern is cut in four sizes: 2, 4, 6 and 8 years. A 4-year size will require IV 2 yards of 39 inch material. To bind sleeve edges and lower edge of dress and godets will require 3% yards of bias binding. 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 fillling out the above coupon, including 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is njade in about a week.

Committees for Berry Chapter, Service Legion Committee chairmen for Hamilton Berry chapter of the Service Star Legion, appointed at the meeting Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. Cora Young Wiies, president, are: Mrs. D. M. Parry, education: Mrs. Frank Nessler, vigilance; Mrs. O. E. Green, relief; Mrs. Henry Coerper, remembrance; Mrs. W. L. Horn, sisterhood; Mrs. Hessler, memorials, assisted by Mrs. Bruce Maxwell and Mrs. Hilton U. Brown; Mrs. George Lacey, Americanization, with Mrs. D. H. Fatout and Mrs. J. E. Pierce; Mrs. Robert Hammond, ceremonials, with Mrs. James Sturgis and Mrs. Madison Swadener; Mrs. Ralph E. Kennington, legislation. with Mrs. A. N. Bonham; Mrs. Howard Maxwell, publicity, and Mrs. Charles K. McDowell. Mrs. M. D. Didway, music chairman, assisted by Mrs. Maxwell. Mrs. Hugh McGibney, Mrs. George Reeder, Mrs. Ruth Ranier Nessler anti Mrs. A. C.Cavins; Mrs. Linton A. Cox, lookout chairman, with Mrs. George Spiegel, Mrs. H. L. Waterbury; Mrs. Coerper and Mrs. Nessler, patriotic relations; Mrs. O. E. Green, social. with Mrs. W. L. Horn, Mrs. Charles A. Trask, Mrs. A. M. Glossbrenner, Mrs. C. F. Neu and Mrs. Ada Mann. Mrs. Daisy Hayes, chairman, ways and means: Mrs. E. H. Pursell, Mrs. Mack Coppock, Mrs. Eifie Schoen-Morgan, Mrs. Fred B. Boyd, Mrs. Charles E. Cottingham, Mrs. Aura G. Brown, Mrs. J. H. Hofmeister. Mrs. E. Nevins, Mrs. Elolse Hamilton, Mrs. Margaret Over, Mrs. Ethel Kennedy, Mrs. T. A. O’Dell, Mrs. J. L. Ranier and Mrs. Ethel Rathert. To Wed in France The marriage of Nat J. Buskirk, Bloomington, and Miss Louise Marie Combacon, Paris, France, will occur in Paris in May. Their romance began when Mr. Buskirk attended the American Legion convention in Paris last fell. Following the wedding the couple will remain in Pans for several months and will return to Bloomington to live.

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So he settles' down to spend a concentrative afternoon. But the reading room presents him with distractions very soon, Economic laws he feels are not essential things to know. When he sees a pretty sweater with a silken yoke and bow.

EXERCISE FOR FACE AND NECK

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This is one of the neck exercises Marjorie Dork describes in the accompanying article.

Editor’s Note—This Is the concluding article of Marjorie -’Pork's exclusive series on health and beauty. In It she prescribes exercises to remove superfluous flesh from the neck and face. BY MARJORIE DORK Health and Beauty Expert For NEA Service No matter what particular problem is yours in reducing your body, you must watch your neck and face. It'is well to remember Just what dieting does. While you are not eating fattening food the body draws on the fat you stored away when you were overeating. This fat is needed for metabolism, which is the technical name for the process of rebuilding. When your excess fat has been absorbed, you can not help but he lithe and limber again. But remember the flabby skin must be re-absorbed also. It had to stretch to accommodate your heavy intake of food, and now it must shrink so as to fit your slimmer frame. This is accomplished by vigorous exercise. You must also

MARYE and ‘MOM’ tt tt n THEIR LETTERS

BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES Mom, dear: Here's where you get the surprise of your life. I went, alone and unprotected, to the lion’s den. And I came out all of a piece. Now, I’ll tell you what those plans are—those I referred to in a previous letter. I knew when Michello asked me to pose for him that it was purely a business proposition. Don’t ask me how I knew. Even girls of your day must have known when they appealed to a man as a man. I knew I hadn’t clicked with Michello. He didn’t seem to be interested in me as an addition to his love gallery. There were others, I admit, at the party who took notice of me after the show in a warmly personal way, but Michello was not one of them. He told me that he liked my figure and wanted to sketch me in poses of the dance. They're to be used in illustrating a book on the origin of modern dancing. He’s going to do a series. It will take some time, as he can’t work steadily on them. He has three portraits , under way now and several more ordered. Some day I hope he’ll do one of me, but his prices are stiff. I thought he might offer to do it for less if I posed for him. But he insists upon paying me for my work. And say, Mom, maybe you think it isn’t work. Gosh, I’m full of crinks and knots that I know will never come out. It may sound like the life of Riley standing up there on a dais and just holding still, but it’s torture after a while. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to do the Black Bottom again except in slow motion. Michello says these poses are unusually trying, but I can think of easier ways to get Ynoney than by pcsing for it. Coaxing it out of a husband is one, but I’d rather take the harder way to earn it. There’s a mental compensation. It will be a thrill to have a little money of my own again. Os course, Alan and I get along pretty well on the arrangement we made in the beginning about the money I was to have, but there are unexpected uses for a little cash that bob up now and then which make a prenuntial money agreement nothing but a sflPap of paper. If the series and my bones hold out I’ll be able to start a savings account. Dearest love, MARYE.

He. Goes to the Library for a Heavy Afternoon

In a treatise on astronomy, his interest is eager (For his khowledge of the subject on the whole is very meager) But to learn about the zodiac he feels that it is better, To observe the signs of Gemini he sees iipcn a sweater.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

exercise your neck and chin so that the same thing may occur there. So let me outline a few exercises that no reducing woman should neglect: Lie crosswise on the bed so that your shoulders are supported by the edge of the mattress, but your head is over the edge. Then drop your head back until it will go no farther. If you prefer, you can do this sitting up in a chair, dropping your head as far back and then as far forward as you can. Keep the throat muscles tense and feel a good strong pull on the muscles of your thorat. Do this twenty times slowly. , In this same position with your head hanging over the edge of the bed, open your mouth as wide as you can. and go through the motions of violent chewing. When you feel the stretch and pull on the muscles of your chin you will realize that you can wear down a double chin in this way. Then sitting comfortably with your back straight and your shoulders easy, bend the head as far as you can to the left, and then to the right. This is excellent for the contour of the throat and will help also to keep the flesh firm on the neck and chest. Here is another: Lie flat on the floor with the face down and the hands at the sides. Then raise the head, chest and legs from the floor, bowing the body backward until only the ribs and abdomen are resting on the floor. Then press the head back on the spine as far as .it will go. Relax, and repeat ten times. ■ Any woman who has had her face lifted should never attempt massage at home, but all other women can increase their circulation and help their facial contours while dieting by a light facial massage. SHOWER GIVENFOR MISS MARY BOYD Miss Mary Boyd whose engagement to Burt Z. Wright Jr., has been announced, was honor guest Monday night when Miss Betty Nicaise and Mrs. John Bauder entertained with a miscellaneous shower at the home of Miss Boyd’s aunt, Mrs. Charles Lyons, 1826 Ruckle St. Apjpointments were in pink and white. The guests played bunco during the evening. Those present were: Mesdames Isabel Walters and Frank King. and Misses Edi’h Staley, Ethel Allen. Jeanette Miller. : igarct Jones. Irene Zenkin. Esther Haggard. Bernadine Hulsman. Theresa Dwver. Joanna O'Connor. Loretta Judge, Helen and Marie Moran. Grace Baker. Olga Miller. Madge Cook. Grace Bartel. Elizabeth Bush and Helen Yeager. Business Meeting Miss Jessie Brunell, 2823 N. New Jersey St., will be hostess for the regular business meeting of Sigma Sigma Kappa Sorority this evening. Final plans will be made for the card party to be given, Tuesday. Euchre Thursday The Sacred Heart Social Club will entertain with euchre Thursday afternoon at 2:30 at the hall on Union Street. Dinner for Initiates Kappa Phi Gamma sorority entertained at dinner Tuesday night at the Columbia Club preceding the inflation of the following new members: Misses Kathryn Lux, Margaret Crowe, Irene Parrish, Cornelia Packer, Theora Terry and Mary Bristow’. Trio Club Party The Trio Club will have a card party Thursday afternoon and evening at 29 '*> S. Delaware St. Beta Delta Tau sorority will meet this evening with Miss Vitula Hambrock, 3739 E. Vermont St.

Homes of Past Held Happiness BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON I should like to tell young women who have most of their lives ahead of them what I personally believe will be the result of too much gambling on the subject of marriage. It is no news to any of us that this beating about the marriage bush to scare out the bugaboo that causes so much damage has tinned into a carnival of experiment. Almost every kind of marriage seems to be more popular now than what is kgown as the old-fashioned marriage, the kind that founds a little home, starts out with a baby, then others perhaps, little struggles to keep up appearances, the joy of anew piece of furniture, or anew dress, or suit—company to dinner with the attendant flurry and chucking away and farming out the family or borrowing a neighbor to look after the baby, birthday-cakes, Christmas trees, and perhaps that wonderful moment when there can be a bit of a car. Not "Modem” Happiness It sounds so unromantic, so commonplace, so un-soul-satisfying! It sounds so middle-class, as we like to say these days! So slavish, so sacrificing, so humdrum, so contrary to our ideas of “modern” happiness. Nothing erotic about It, either, and we seem to de\>end on the erotic a lot nowadays to satisfy longings for thrills. No clandestine meetings, no feeling that you can be let out if the whim seizes you, no ecstatic going with the tide and floating gloriously hither and yon as fancy takes you. No. None of that! But this carnival of experiment will cost a price in the end. More perhops than it Is w’orth. We get nothing for nothing. And its price will be restlessness and unhappiness in middle age. After Twenty Years Life passes quickly. I can predict almost positively that twenty years from now. when the girls now 20 will be 40, that those who are happiest, healthiest, and most deeply contented will be those who have chosen the "old-fashioned" way of settling down to a real home, a real husband (permanent) and children. Soul-satisfaction! That will be hers, too. much more than that of her experimental sister, for there is no satisfaction so deep as that of having spent your life for others as well as yourself. And what worth-while “others” your family is.

Wife of Bishop Honored at Tea TlMs Afternoon More than two hundred guests were entertained at tea this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter, 5110 N. Meridian St., in honor of Mrs. Frederick D. Leete. wife of the bishop of the Indianapolis area of Methodist Episcopal churches. The rooms of the Baxter home were arranged with tulips, iris and spring flowers in a variety of colors. Assisting Mrs. Baxter were: Mesdames Madison Swadener, J. W. Duncan, W. W. Thornton, J. L. Benedict, James L. Fish, F. A. Stelle, C. P. Bibbs, George S. Henninger, M. A. Farr. H. W. Rhodehamel, L. E, Schultz. E. E. Mitchell. A. F. Baur, O. W. Fifer and Miss Alta Roberts. Luncheon Reservations A formal dinner dance to open the season at the Highland Golf and Country Club will be given Friday at 7p. m. The entertainment committee of which E. A. Cahill is chairman is in charge of arrangements. > - Grotto Dance Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Sahara Grotto will entertain the prophets and ladies Friday evening with a dance at Haddon Hall, fourteen miles east of Indianapolis on the Pendleton pike. The ladies’ drum corps and the Sahara Bud drill team will be hostesses. Mrs. John C. Riddle, president of the auxiliary: Mrs. Robert Wilcox and Mrs. Mae Olwer have charge of arrangements. Firemen’s Auxiliary The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Firemens’ Association will give a card, lotto and bunco party at 8 p. m. Thursday at 116 E. Maryland St., with Mrs. William Powell as hostess. Cards and Lotto A card and lotto party will be given by the Altar Society of Holy Cross-Church Thursday afternoon in the school hall. E. Ohio St.

Cttrifh. MS SmM hUuhim, Ctrfwhu

As for problems in geometry appearing in a book, He could learn as much about the science in a single look At the sweater with the figures geometric in design, V/hich impress the Connoisseur as educationally fine.

CHAPTER F, P. E. 0., HAS LUNCHEON PARTY Chapter F, P. E. 0., was entertained at luncheon today at the home of Mrs. Jesse Martin, 510 W. Forty-Fourth St., followed by a business meeting and short prograrft. The tables were arranged with daffodils carrying out a color scheme of yellow and white. Plans were made for the State convention of P. E. O. to be held at Hotel Severin June 19, 20 and 21, for which Chapter F will be hostess. At the meeting this afternoon each member told her method for earning $5, a task set for each. Reception to Pastor Members of the Thirty-First St. Baptist Church will hold a reception for their new pastor, the Rev. Orville E. Daniel, next Tuesday sit Bp. m. in the church parlors. The Rev. Mr. Daniel will come this week to take up his duties. He has been attending the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. War Mothers’ Party Mrs. Anna Lubking, 62 N. Sherman Dr., will be hostess for a party given by the Marion County chapter of American War Mothers Friday afternoon. A program will be given by Charlotte Reisner, pianist; Dorothy See, soloist, and Mrs. Glenn Kingham, reader. Assisting Mrs. Lubking will be: Mesdames Oscar E. Lewis, J. E. Barcus, Lavalette Dickey, T. P. Pumphrey, D. C. Donnell, Hilton U. Brown, Robert Fitch, Andrew Peterson, Sarah Ulen, Marie Halcott and Melville Moon.

Entertain With Bridge Fete at Woodstock Club Spring flowers In a variety of colors were used as appointments for the luncheon bridge which Mrs. Henry Ruckelshaus and Mrs. Ida Langsenkamp gave today at Woodstock Club. There were guests for thirty-two tables. Spring flowers were used on each of the small tables and in bowls throughout the rooms of the club house. Mrs. Joe White and Mrs. Koss of Noblesville, were out-of-town guests.

“More for Your Money at Goldstein’s ’* Goldstein Brothers WASHINGTON, DELAWARE AND OURT STREETS—Phone Lincoln 1301

Our 19th Anniversary Sale Starts Friday! Open House Thursday Nigltt—7:3o to 9:00 A Gala Night! Spring Fashion Show! Music by Bill Lynch and His Gang! Flowers for the Ladies! Louise Powell’s Juvenile Follies! Store-Wide Displays of New Spring Merchandise! Open House! Thursday Night! Welcome!

Goldstein s for Drapery Values! In Goldstein’s Drapery Sections you will find a wonderful array of DEPENDABLE draperies, curtains and curtain fabrics—at surprisingly low , prices.

Valandxsg 12 Inches deep; velour Pl® v a lancing; plain or embossed designs—in rose, blue, red, green or mulberry. Trimmed with 2-inch polychrome bullion fringe. Hemmed and ready to hang. 36-in. Gauze Fart linen xr*. theatrical gauze 'ln plain fast colors, or twotone combinations.

Cretonnes Double-faced tapestry cretonnes # in beautiful allover patterns. Durable and hard-finished quality for upholstering or slip covers.

New 19c Dress GINGHAMS l2y 2 * Fast color dress ginghams in attractive checks, plaids, stripes and plain colors. Useful lengths for women’s and children’s garments, yard.

Fine Dress Prints, 25c High quality dress prints; dainty English designs on light grounds; for house dresses, children’s garments and many other uses. Cheviot Shirting, 15c Fast color shirtings in attractive checks, i stripes or popular plain colors. Lengths suitable for blouses, shirts, etc. 15£ yard.

PARTIES TO HONOR MISS MARY NORWOOD Mrs. Thomas L. Neal, 3344 Guilford Ave., will entertain Friday afternoon in honor of Miss Mary Norwood, whose marriage to Donald F. Kennedy, Martinsville, will take place May 17. Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. Addison King will entertain with a dinner bridge party for Miss Norwood and Mr. Kennedy. * Teachers College Faculty Member Will Be Speaker Miss Helen Brouse of the Jackson graded school faculty at Teachers College, will talk on “The Interrelations of Elementary Supervisors and Teachers” at the annual conference on elementary supervision at Bloomington Thursday. Miss Mamie Lott, director of Jackson school, and Miss Elizabeth Betcher of Teachers College, will also attend the meeting. Members of the Teachers College faculty who will attend the annual conference on educational measurements, which will be combined with the elementary conference at Bloomington Thursday arid Friday, are Miss Fay Marshall, M?a. Alice Diven Goss, Miss Lucy Brokaw, Miss Mary E. Walkup, Miss Elizabeh Means, Miss Emily Brenton, Mrs. Maria W. Hyde, Miss Elizabeth Hall and Miss Emma Colbert. Mrs. F. D. Norris, alumnae district chairman of the Indianapolis district for the Eliza A. Blaker memorial endowment campaign of Teachers College, has appointed the following assistants as county chairmen: Miss Mary Powell, Shelby; Miss Mildred Anne Coffin, Hamilton; Miss Nettie Ruth Scroggs, Tipton; Miss Beulah Biggs, Hendricks; Mrs. Mark Adler, Boone; Mrs. Mildred Thompson, Morgan; Miss Blanche Wright, Johnson, and Miss Janice Meredith Rasch, Hancock. Social Club Party St. Patrick’s Social Club will give a card party Friday evening in the school hall. Mrs. Edward Fink is chairman. Card Party The women of Mooseheart Legion will give a card party at 2:30 p. m. Thursday at the Moose Temple, 135 N. Delaware St.

|;%! |iK IS, £\ 4 : m j

Damask 50-Inch width drapery damask and aq of lustrous rayon. New patterns V [p in plain or striped effects. Wide ** enough to split.

Novelty Voiles, 19c 40-Inch dress voiles. Ideal for spring and summer dresses. Large or small designs on light or dark grounds. 29c Romper Cloth, 19c 32-Inch width. In checks, stripes and plain colors. Assorted useful lengths for play suits, rompers, dresses, etc. 19£ yard.

.’APRIL IS, 1928(

Officers to Be Chosen by Council Reports of affiliated organizations and election of officers were on the program for the final day’s session of the May Wright Sewall Council meeting today at the Lincoln. Nominations made by the committee of which Mrs. Jessie F. Croan, Anderson, is chairman, were: Mrs. W. A. Denny, Anderson, for re-election as president; Mrs. Edna Pauley, first vice president, Miss Marion Ingham, Ft. Wayne, second vice president; Mrs. Bruce Maxwell, third vice president; Mrs. J. E. Barcus, fourth vice president; Mrs. Melville Moon, recording secretary, and Mrs. H. L. Smith, Bloomington, treasurer. American War Mothers, auxiliary of the United Spanish War Veterans, Federated Patriotic Societies of the G. A. R. and the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs were represented in reports. At the luncheon at noon discussion of national defense, preservation of battle flags, veterans’ hospitals and recognition of soldiers at Ft. Harrison were led by representatives of patriotic organizations. Reports of work done by the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays, Indiana Parent-Teacher Association, Ladies of the G. A. R., Daughters of Union Veterans, Sons of Veterans auxiliary. Women’s Auxiliary of Retail Druggists, Women’s Relief Corps, Woman’s Republican Club of Indiana, Thirty-Eighth Division Auxiliary and Indiana Child Welfare Association were given. Opening at Highland 1 Reservations for the luncheon of the Seventh District Federation of Women’s Clubs Friday at the Severin should be made by Wednesday evening with Mrs. J. B. Phillips or Mrs. C. T. Austin. Neio Pledges Epsilon Delta of Indiana State, Terre Haute, has pledged Pearl Glenn, Brazil; Margaret Rininger, Bedford; Mary Kehrer, Linton; Ruth Rudolph, Cambridge City; Madge Kitchen, Clinton; Doris Delong, Brazil; Ethel Harris, Lewis; Hazel May Johnson, Jasonville, and Dorothy Caresa, Mt. Vernon.

Shadow Net 50-In. width, shadow lacy C Cng nets in ecru color; a good selection of patterns. Use one strip to a window. Spanish Net 48-In. width', gold color y vTf© rayon Spanish net, that washes Well. With a very lustrous finish. Use one strip to a window.