Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 94, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1928 — Page 9
SEPT. 8, 1928.
Asks Advise to Stop Men Proposing THERE is the problem of girl who cannot seem to get along with men; the one about the girl who has not met any men; the triangles in their various ind sundry forms, but here is a brand new something to puzzle over. Just what does a girl do who is too attractive? When she is annoyed with having to watch practically every man who meets her fall in love with her. So you see the solution to some people’s troubles is not necessarily the beginning of wisdom for others, and what solves things for one person might mean a lot of grief to someone else. This sweet young thing says: Dear Miss Lee—X am a reader of your column and I marvel at the advice you give. I have never found anything that •would lead to a solution of my problem, hence this letter. I wonder if you know why it is that fellow's always get so serious with girls, especially when they know that their salaries would Justify them in getting married? I am 19. dcent and respectable and come from a refined family. I have many friends and have gone with a number of boys, but none steady. And I will say that among them, none has been disrespectful in any way, principally, because I chose my company. I have never gone with anyone steady, the longest time being three months. 1 always try to be kind and polite to everyone. I do not know if it is because I am so affectionate and kind, but it seems that all my friends are not satisfied with being my friends. Instead they want to be my sweethearts, theirs alone and some even husbands. Now Miss Lee, I do not know how you feel about this, but I consider it a rather Jsrious matter. I like to have friends and enjoy going places with the boys occassionaliy. But I have a good home, position and until I am certain that I .can better myself, I intend to stay single. The boys tell me that I am a wonderful girl, not another in a million like me, and all that sort of thing. I tell them that I Jo/i’t believe them as I know it is very eaty to talk, that I suppose they hand all the girls the same line. They say that I am the only one, and the longer I go with tnem. the worse, it gets. So I am just forced to refuse them dates. I doubt if any of them really loves me, but folks tell me that it is not natural for boys to cry when I tell them I don’t believe it when they say how much they like me. I don’t want any one to get crazy about me, but I dislike very much to be obliged to turn them down cold in order to prevent such things. I don’t know any other way out. Could you suggest something? M. K. You might try wearing a linen ifluster and carrying a sand pail and a buggy whip in your hands when you go out. No one can make love to any one who looks ridiculous. You would be performing a great good—keep a dozen or* so good fellows in circulation, amused, interested, and, above all, light hearted. If you make them laugh they will not have time to think of their unrequited love. You might practice up on not being quite so sweet, also. That often helps in a situation of this kind. Seriously, though, If you do want to have dates and you can’t seem to have them without simply bowling over every man you go out with try the lahgh tonic. They will not want to make love when they are being amused some other way. VOTJR CHILD Z -. Difficult Task Helps Child
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON IDO not believe in “forcing” children. There is seldom anything gained in hammering away at a child day in and day out to get him to do something that is absolute.'/ beyond his comprehension. Nothing is likely to. result from that but mental confusion. But on the other hand I should not encourage him to give up too easily. It is good for a child occasionally to have things to do that are not quite within his scope of understanding or accomplishment. If we were always to do the things we know how to do perfectly there would be no advancement. There isn’t a thing wrong once In a blue moon for the mother of twelve-year-old Elizabeth to say, *“I won’t be home in time to get dinner this evening, but there is plenty of food to cook. You see that your father and the boys are fed.” Elizabeth may be thunderstruck, unhappy and indignant. Futhermore father may have to get out his indigestion pills afterwards and the boys sneak off to the hot-dog stand an hour later Cos fill up the vacuum that nature seems to abhor, but Elizabeth surely will have learned something of culinary skill in the experiment and make mistakes she won’t make again. Jack’s father may say to him, “I ordered some lumber today for the partitions in the vegetable cellar your mother has been wanting. Tomorrow is Saturday and I want you to get at it and do what you can.” Jack may not claim cousinshlp with the gentleman of the rhyme, “This is the house that Jack r built.” Perhaps he knows no more about a hammer and a saw than I know about wireless telegraphy. But if he is worth his salt he is going to put together some boards in such a way that the potatoes, apples, cabbages, carrots and the turnips, or whatever else one keeps on the dirt floor of a “vegetable cellar” through the winter, won’t be rubbing elbows with one another. The next time he does any carpenter work, he wil know more about wood and nails, angles and corners, sawing and planing, than he did before. It need not be cooking. It need not be hammering. It need indeed be nothing requiring physical prow*ess or cleverness, but merely a process of the mind. No one deserves praise so much for the things he knows how to do well, as for the thing that he does not know how to do. but isn’t afraid to tackle. It is one of the greatest character builders I know. But, of course, like all other things, should be done within reason. And allowances should be made for failure. Street Pumps^ Autumn walking shoes* .concentrate on the pump. Calf-skin, lizard, sharkskin and suede are the favorite media. Shoe Trees Shoes are often stretched by having too large shoe trees inserted. Trees should be just the length of the shoe, as well as just as wide in the tip.
BRIDES IN LATE SUMMER RITES
5’ <■ ■ ‘ 'Jmim % ' ■'ll! MiSS Doroth y' Mae Cole, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cole. 2258 New Jersey St., became ~ | ' Nineteenth St. Mr. and Mrs. King are making thCir hOmG in Cham P al ® n ’ where he is an —Schumacher Photos.
Home-Coming Fete Planned by Auxiliary The anniversary luncheon and home-coming celebration of the Grotto auxiliary will be held at 12 o’clock Tuesday at Haddon Hall Park. A program of entertainment is being arranged by the committee. Plans are under the supervision of Mrs. John L. Duvall, general chairman, assisted by the following committees: Hospitality, Mrs. Bertha Lou Williams; entertainment, Mrs. Mae Oliver; cards, Mrs. Neil Ruebei; decorations, Mrs. Otis Macy, and transportation, Mrs. Mary Routier. All those going to dinner will meet at Massachusetts Ave. station at Tenth St. and Massachusetts Ave., not later than 11:30 where there will be cars to go to Haddon Hall. Prom this point cars will leave at 11:30, go north on Massachusetts Ave., about 13 miles to Oaklandon, Haddon Hall Park. After luncheon there will be cards and bunco. Members may bring guests. , Putty IJndies New lingerie goes in strong for brown shades, as do dresses. The latest sets are of exquisite ninon. in what is konwn as putty >rown, slightly darker than beige.
TAILORED GLOVE
Smartly ' tailored is this glove with interesting model design appliqued diagonally across the top. A perforated beige strip and two narrow ones of brown on biscuit kid.
THE CONNOISSEUR
Very often Mr. Vandie gives a lot of invitations. To the openings and then again he follows inclinations And betakes himself alone to sit in solitary ease To survey the audience his curiosity to please.
Miss Dorothy' Mae Cole, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Cole, 2258 N. New Jersey St., became the bride of Frank Dilling Walker, son of William A. Walker, Sunday, Sept. 2. They will live in Indianapolis. Mrs. Edward King was before her marriage Saturday, Sept. 1, Miss Frances E. Smith, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. F. E. Smith, 318 E. Nineteenth St. Mr. and Mrs. King are making their home in Champaign, 111., where he is an instructor in the department of chemistry in the University of Illinois. —Schumacher Photos.
Woman’s Day
BY ALLENE SUMNER People don’t know how to play naturally and wholesomely any more, they say. The only recreation that "clicks” is something hot and jazzy and artificial and extravagant —dining at a roadhouse or cabaret, dancing in a crowded, overheated ballroom with grotesquely shifting colored lights drenching everyone; or the amusement parks, shoot-the-chutes and funny houses. Then the critic launches into a rhapsody of the good old days when men and women were content with simple pleasures—hayrack rides under a copper moon, picnics in cool, leafy groves; marshmallow and corn roasts, sleigh rides ending in oyster suppers. One hears all this and is inclined to nod a sage agreement. Then one sometimes gets a glimpse of things as they really are. We—my brother and I—decided to turn back to an old childhood page and go fishing on a holiday not so long ago in a certain old muddy pond where grew the tastiest bullheads that ever swam. Years ago the long hours of summer had found us beside that sedgey, reed-grown pond. Sometimes mother would give us a bag of sandwiches and cookies and bananas and we would stay all dey—not fishing all the time, but pushing our old flat-bottomed scow around the pond, scaring up the rushes, finding yellow and white wa-red-winged blackbirds fro mthe bullter lilies and the blue pickerel weed. The old pond was miles away from where the years had brought us, but with a before sunrise start we knew that we could make it. "Probably the fish don’t bite nearly so fast as we seem to remember,” we agreed, "and they’re probably not nearly so big as we remember them, but it’ll be a quiet, restful day anyway—there won’t be a soul around—everyone will be at an amusement park.” So we went. u mu The pond was there. The redwinged blackbirds were there. The blue pickerel weed and the pond lilies were there, and so were the giant bull-frogs and sweet watercress. But we were not. alone. We counted twenty-four fishermen and women circling the little pond. Most of them, judging by the queque of autos at the pond’s edge, had come a long way, too. They wore city clothes. Many of them were perched on camp stools. They lunched from
He could call the roll of all the Social Register and find Not a single absentee, and just because he’s so inclined He examines all the jewelry, a crystal choker here Set with mirror backs to make it scintillate afar and near.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Draft Leaders of Girl Scouts Training Work Leader’s training classes will begin Monday morning at 10, Oct. 22 at the Girl Scout headquarters, 512 Board of Trade Bldg. Both old and new leaders are eligible. The same course will be given again in the evening at 7:30, Oct. 22, both classes being held every Monday thereafter. Those wishing to use Sycamore Lodge, Pioneer Kitchen or other equipment at Camp Dellwood for overnight hikes must obtain permission at the office. Girl Scouts from various troops have been assisting at the Better Babies contest at the State fair this week. The next court of awards will be held Friday evening, Oct. 28. Any badge may be obtained at the October court, but all recommendations must be in the Girl Scout office not later than Saturday, Oct. 13. The office staff now consists of Miss Jean Adamson, acting local director; Miss Miriam Fay and Miss Jane Albom, field captains, and Miss Florence Stack, office secretary. Timmerman-Huber Miss Charlotta Faye Huber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Huber, became the bride of Elvin Timmerman, son of Mrs. Christine Timmerman, Beech Grove, at the old Bethel Church Wednesday evening, the Rev. Ethelbert Lester officiating. the last word in picnic kits and thermos bottles. And their faces were fairly radiant! They loved it. They were not interlopers in our childhood’s paradise. They belonged there. But the tragedy was that the out-of-the-way quiet secluded spots of earth are becoming too few to go around. And as a result there is no solitude for anyone. But. st °P telling us that people no longer like "natural outdoor pleasures.” Real estate men will tell you that a funny out-at-the-heels shack or cabin by a river or lake will sell like hot cakes—that the market simply doesn’t meet the demand for this sort of thing. “They don’t care for conveniences,” they’ll tell you. “They just want lots of trees and water and birds and quiet.” Poor humans of a modern industrial day fighting not for "artificial pleasures,” but for their birthright of sun and star and moon and lake and tree!
An Opening Night and a Box Party Alone
—OeE O. S. Pat OO."
His binoculars are clever and discriminating, too , f In the articles they concentrate upon to bring to view— Here’s another crystal necklace set with shining links of gold On a debutante who really Is a picture to behold.
New Europe Is Topic for Travel Club The lecture topic for this year of the International Study and Travel Club is “The New Europe.” Mrs. Samuel R. Artman, lecturer, will talk this week on “Enchanting Blue Grottoes of Capri Isle.” Mrs. J. J. Ryan will entertain the Elsinor chapter with a luncheon Monday. Mrs. Arthur Hoffman and Mrs. T. Jacobson, who have just returned from Denmark, will tell of their trip. Flags will be used for the decorations. Australian chapter will meet on | Tuesday afternoon for luncheon at the home of the vice preside.l Mrs. John F. Ruppert. The president, Mrs. Amie Jackson will assist,, the hostess. The Alpina chapter and the Eidelweiss chapter will hold their opening meeting at 6:30 Tuesday evening at the Lunley tearoom. A musical program will be given by Mrs. A. H. Manning and Miss Ruth Hoover. Mrs. J. H. Marshall, president of the Eidelweiss chapter, and ! Miss Anna Weaver, corresponding secretary, who have been spending the summer in California, and Miss Ruth Taylor, treasurer of the AlI pina chapter, who has recently returned from a tour of Europe, will be the guests of honor. Summer i flowers and small flags of numerous ! foreign countries will decorate the | tables. ! The Mandalay chapter will be entertained at its first meeting of the year by its president, Mrs. J. G. Karstedt, with a 12:30 luncheon Wednesday. Mrs. C. E. Stout and Mrs. George Pugh will be the assistant hostesses. A special program of music has been arranged. The Washington chapter will meet at the home of the president, Miss Ruth Knott, at 8 q’clock Wednesday evening. Fall flowers will bo used as decorations. The Panamanian' chapter will meet for a 2:30 luncheon Thursday at the home of the president, Mrs. P. E. Vickers. Fall flowers and flags will be used as decorations. Each members will respond to roll call with a current event.
Family Menus
BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST—Green gage plums, cereal, cream, liver and bacon patties, com meal and graham muffins, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Sweet com souffle, sliced tomatoes with shredded green pepper, toasted muffins, cottage cheese, currant jam, milk, tea. DINNER—Egg and beet appetizer, lima beans in cream, buttered spinach, duck and orange jelly salad with endive, fresh peach shortcake, milk, coffee. This dinner menu is ideal for hot weather. The appetizer and salad take care of the meat problem as well as adding vegetables to the : menu. Sweet Com Souffle One and cne-half cups sweet corn cut from cob, one teaspoon sugar,” one-half teaspqpn salt, one-eighth teaspoon pepper, three tablespoons flour, one cup milk, four eggs. To cut corn from cob score down through the center of each row of kernels. Cut off tops with sharp knife. With the blunt edge of the knife scrape out the milk and heart. Mix and sift flour, snugar, salt and pepper over corn. Stir with a fork until thoroughly blended. Add milk and yolks of eggs beaten until thick and lemon colored. Fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff and dry. Turn mixture into a well buttered bak.ng dish and bake thirty minutes in a moderate oven. When firm to the touch, the souffle is done. Serve at once from baking dish.
FRENCH HAT
i/D/i
Brown hatter’s plush is arranged over the crown of a beige felt poke in a feather design in this new French model.
RUSSIAN DUKE TO ADDRESS BUSINESS WOMEN OCT. 15
Three persons of international note have been secured to head the lecture program of the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club, which opens its fourteenth club year, Oct. 4. Grand Duke Alexander of Russia, will speak Oct. 15; Cyril Maude, English actor-manager on Jan. 28; and Thornton Wilder, author of “The Bridge of San Luis Rey,” April 15. The organization, which closely is associated in its activities with the State and National federations, will hold its meetings every other Thursday night. Miss Glen D. Anderson, club president, announces the club chairmen and their committees for the year : r 18-29 as follows: j'irst vice president, Mrs. Hazel l. irkman; second vice president, ns. Ada O. Frost; corresponding secretary, Miss Lucy Osborne; recording secretary, Miss Ernestine Meneley; treasurer, Miss Retta Hal-
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- o >1 rv o tern No. O 1/ O Size Street City Name
A MORE IT2MININE TYPE , You’ll be delighted with its slender lines and flattering jabot at either side of front panel with Vionnet neckline, that adds a feminine touch. The circular skirt fronts forming plaits at each side of center-front, flutters graciously in motion. An unusually smart effect is attained for afternoons by using black chiffon printed in flowered pattern in exquisite coloring with plain black chiffon for jabots, front panel and belt. Printed silk crepe with plain silk crepe in predominating tone of print, black lace with chiffon, sheer tweed with silk crepe, and navy blue georgette crepe are interesting combinations for style No. 3403. Pattern for this charming dress comes in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers wh owish 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.
Corporatism
In between the acts he doesn’t even smoke a cigarette For he doesn’t want to miss a single sight that he can get. And rewarded by a lady in a lengthy crystal chain He decides to stay inside r' intermission •time again.
sey; auditor, Miss Harriet Bateman. The board of directors includes the following: Mesdames Florence Allay, Sara Major Avery, Grace Olmore, Misses Jessie Bryant, Isabel Drummond, Olga Ilg, Constance Mae, Mary Peacock, Kathryn Petry, Eliazbeth Rainey, Louise Hoss and Cora T. Schoen. The committee chairmen and their personnel for the year includes: Cheer—Mayme Blade, chairman; Mrs. Clara Benson, Jessie Holmes. Nell Lusk. Ethel Pennington. Door—Vlca Jane Head, chairman; Grace Beall, Irene Daugherty. Daisy Grafftey, Minnie HIU. Mrs. A. B. Higgins. Katherine Kaerscher. Kate Lin. Edith Peterson, Mrs. Emma Randall and Cora Wilson. Educational—Mrs. Nellie C. Warren, chairman; Edith Finch. Ruth Leedy, Luella A. Newport. Mesdames Elsa Huebner Olsen. Caroline Rodecker. Lailao Sipe, Herman Tuttle. Margaret Whitford. Emblem. Emma Dashlell, chairman; Edith Dashlell. Stella L. Dunlap, Pae Harris, La Vaerne MacDonald, Laura Michelson. Kathleen Peek. Emma Jane Ross. Extension—Mrs. Ann L. Deßosa, chairman; Nell Allemlon, Ida M. Anderson. Ida Macintosh, Lillian McCoun. Marie K. Parker, Marie Tudor, Sue Wallace, Minnie Young. Finance—Frances Behn, chairman; Mesdames Edna L. Bateman, Eva L Collins, Etta Griffin. William H. Kershncr, Katherine Neth, Florence K. Thacker. Ascnath J. Tron; Iza H. Williamson, Imogene Shaw, Winifred Ryan. Charlotte, D. Raiss, Jessie M. Pavey, Kitty Klyde Mitchell. Stella Michelson, Mae Judkins. Inez Holmes, Mabel Badorf, M. Belle Cope, Josephine English. Fdrum—Louise R. Ford, chairman; Emma Clinton. Emma Donnan, Laura Donnan, Eunice Henley, Grace King, Grace Lyons, Kate Vorts. Mesdames Gertrude Long. Annette Wilson. Health—Dr. Ada E. Schweitzer, chairman; Myrtle Long, Addle Saltmarsh, Ruth Van Anda, Mesdames Florence Wam-ick, Margaret D. Marlowe, Leons B. Knight, Emma L. McKinney, Ann McQutllin. Historian, Mrs. R. Harry Miller and Clara M. Given, Hosnltallty—Louise M. Stadler. chairman Esther L. Bowman, Jessey C. Denny. Marjorie Ford. Mary Fielder, Lena Cruner, Lois M Henley. Ruth Henson, Blanche Irish, Jessie Jolly. Frances Kelly, Frances Merl, Flora Paetz, Jean Paton. Ella Stuart. Legislation—Margaret L. Shuler, chairman; Adah Huber, Jennie Henshan. Mary H. Peacock. Elizabeth Rainey, Bess Robbins. Membership—Fanny Miner, chairman. Music—Flora E. Lyons, chairman; Ida Sayles 3raddock. Dorothy Sylvester, Mes-. dames B. H. Parks. Anita Scott. Personal Resaerch —Merica E Hoagland, Phoebe Jeffers, Gertrude Lleber, Mae Louthi.n, Mamie Larsh, Jennie Reno. Hannah C. Swearingen, Mrs, Mildred B. Wvckoff. .Program—Pearl L. Holloway, chairman; Jessie Boyce, Pauline Keller, Lillian Harrison. Lenora Honecker, Isadora Kessler. Forba McDaniels, Frances Moder, Mesdames Felix C McWhirter. Lorene Satterlee. Rose Lee Farrell. Public Relations—Dr. Made B. Kast, chairman; Alice Anderson, Agnes Cruse, Eleanor Hoagland, Anna Kerth, Ida Mann. Minnie E. Mootz, Moffett Richards, Bertha C. Wallace. Grace Thompson, Mesdames Vashlti Cox. Hazelle Dissette, Abbie MacDonald, S. E. Perkins, Grace S. Urbahns. Publicity—Myra E. Majors, chairman; Winifred Douglas, Hazel Doyle, Thelma Hawthorne, Jeanette Shafer, Claire ThomDson. Publication Sue Stuart, chairman; Darsy Holmes, Mrs. Lula Harney. Service—Pearl Teckemeyer, chairman; Anna Gels. Gavle Baird, Lois Baker. Theta M. Bvrkett, Lena Harvey, Elma Jennings. Amelia Klipple, Edna Frances hinnev, Martha Pommerrening, Lucille ihompson, Mesdames Lou Casev, Pearl Cook, Ora Maud Hardie, Amelia W. Hampton. Ethel Shaw. Supper—Mabel E. Rose, chairman; Lulu Allen. Sarah Brown. Orpha Cook. Rhoda Davies. Thelma Kinsey. Winifred Leak, Cora’ Shepperd. Alice Sillowav. Mabel Voris. Evelyn Allison. Estelle Buffer, Lulu M. Farlev. Grace Norwood, Maude McAllister, Mesdames Anna M. Conner. Tressie O. Kirk. Bessie M. Shinn. Flora Behrens, Bertha B. Tilton and Julia F. Shine.
Camp Fire Girls
Mrs. Charles H. Smith, president of the Indianapolis Council of Camp Fire Girls, is in Denver attending the national council meeting. The report of this meeting will be given at the October meeting of the council. Girls who have good pictures taken at Camp Alahi are urged to send or bring them, with the negatives, to the Camp Fire office, so that copies can be made to send to national headquarters. The first issue of “Fagots” will be ready on Saturday, Sept. 29. Contributions of all kinds are needed. All material should be in the Camp Fire office by 5 Tuesday, Sept. 25. The November issue will be edited by Wapo-Meo group of School 51. Other groups wishing to edit a number should sign up for the month desired at or.ee. Fresh Drains Whenever cauliflower, cabbage or other strong vegetables are darined into the sink, the hot or cold water tap should be turned on immediately for a few seconds to wash out the drain and keep it smelling fresh.
GOWN COLLAR
rwi I I v* 7 1 1 i I l\ fl i'| |\ 1 I I HI v / w JjH
An interesting collar of ecru lace, with ends looped up and falling in a jabot, trims a rust-brown velvet gown. A large topaz pin gives a clever accent. Announce Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Klinge, 4950 Graceland Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Bertha Ann, to Gilbert Malone. The wedding will take place at 8:30 Wednesday, Oct. 10, at the Emmaus Lutheran Church.
Announcing Our New Policy Featuring Our High-Grade Nestle Circuline Permanent t WAVE O | Authorised Agency lor | REALISTIC Method Permanent Waving ADA M. BLAIR BEAUTY SHOPPE Lincoln 0240 413 State Life Bldg.
PAGE 9
Bridge Fete Is Given for Bride-Elect Miss Helen De Veiling, 3954 Ruckle St., was hostess Friday afternoon at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Mary Alice Wishard, whose marriage to Richard L. Federman, Brookville, will take place Wednesday. Appointments and decorations were in pink and blue, the bridal colors. Garden flowers In those shades decorated the house and the ices \\jere served in miniature blue flower pots, with Butterfly roses. The tables were arranged with white tapers in blue crystal holders, tied with pink tulle. The gifts were presented to Miss Wishard in a huge bride’s bouquet. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother were Mesdames Alice Irwin, F. N. Crowell, Donald Le Fuze, Lawrence Wrentmore and C. L. Masters, Brooklyn; Misses Edith Corya, Laura Templeton, Gertrude Insley, Helen Wilson, Marian Marshall, Mary Lee Orloff. Constance Johnson and Mildred Masters, Brookville. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. L. P. De Veiling.
Prize Recipes by Readers
NOTE—The Times will give <1 for each recipe submitteo by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed In 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 Corn Fritters Two cups corn cut Irom cob, two level teaspoons baking powder, onehalf cup flour, two beaten eggs, onehalf level teaspoon salt, pinch pepper, one-half cu milk and one tablespoon melted butter. Sift dry Ingredients thoroughly. Rub in butter and add liquids. Beat well and fry like other fritters in a deep kettle of fat. Serve hot. MRS. MARY LONG. 810 Jefferson St., Crawfordsville. Hot Soda If your sink drain smells, treat it with a hot solution of washing soda. It is a good idea to do this frequently, not to wait until it smells. Gilt China Some new china has a tiny edging of gilt to emphasize its pattern. When wasihng this type use very little soap in the water as the soap takes off the gilt. Scorch Stains If you scorch an article rub soap on the scorched place and put out in the sun Next cover with a thin mixture v and put in the eral times if t It will come o An) Colorful wc about the wl summer sporti for fall novelties Uiiuw. of anklettes. They are to be worn over the stockings. Brown Hosiery Brown hosiery promises many attractive dark shades. Tawnee and chaldee are two new sombre browns and russet and acajou are browns with a lot of life to them. Many street frocks have highlow’ necks that can be worn either way. But many new night gowns have high necks; dainty little standing collars of lace and silk. SCHijOgfCHS Qjg|jsvE Otert Churned from'frtShOKm Norman's Blue Bird Store Set of BLUE BIRD DISHES SIVET*. AWAV WTTH YOUR. PUkCHASE 09 cash or credit jTOKMANg ■227-241 EAST WASH
Dress Up on Credit— Take 20 Weeks to Pay THE LIBERTY Credit Clothing Cos. 80 North Pennsylvania Street
PI AH OS UPRIGHTS GRAICDB PLATERS jMtaiin y* i*hf c ircle
CAN NOW DO ANY WORK Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound “I think there is no tonic? equal to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound for nervousness and I have used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash and the Pills for Constipation. I can certainly praise your medicines for what they have done for me, and I wish
you success in the future. I can do any kind of work now and when women ask me what has helped me I recommend your medicines. I will answer any letters I receive asking about them.”—-Mrs. Emma Gregg, Route 3, Box 53, Denison, Texas.— Advertisement.
