Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 72, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1929 — Page 10

PAGE 10

Man Without Love Faces Dreary Life BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON One of the greatest of life's tragedies is the missing of love. I know a bachelor, a musician, with the fine nature of the poet, who has spent all his time in study. Hating a .ll superficialities, he has grown more and more reticent, until his contacts with women are very slight. But every mortal dreams of the intimate companionship of some beloved being. We vision the full life as shared gloriously with another. The mating of two people is the only way in which to make our existence complete and perfect, let scoffers say what, they will. Such longings must come to this man. as they come to all of us. He has lived alone so long, however, that he is losing the ability to adjust himself to crowds and therefore he is beginning to beleive that the love of which he dreams is not to be found. Will Grow &nliU**7 Gradually I<e will resign himself. He wilt grow more and more solitary and after the first fine days of early maturity he will swell the ranks of unmarried men whose fate, in spite of their protests, is pitiable. Many men and women seem doomed to go through life thus, • like ships that pass in the night,” missing by only a little the other being who might crown their days with the glory only love can give. I know it has become a habit to poke fun at all matrimonial bureaus and agencies, because most of them are fakes. Nevertheless, there is a crying need for something of that sort, properly managed. It seems tragic that, some great humanitarian has not made this his life’s work, and that we can not seem to devise a method of helping sensitive and lonely persons with this great problem. Leave It to Fate For this particular man there must be. not one, but many women who could be to him all that his heart desires. It is folly to say that nature has ceased making women , who are fit to marry. And it is nov | true that you alone of all the world j are a solitary soul for whom God j has created no mate. Men are not, taught the fine art I of courtship. They spend years on i their work, and believe that fate 1 will arrange their love life for them. Had this man pursued love as arduously as he has pursued per- i section in music, dare one say that j he would not have found his dream?

Family Menu

BY SISTER MARY JiEA Service Writer Vegetables are in the limelight as never before. They’re a part of almost every menu. The. summer vegetables generally arp not strong flavored, but are delicate and blend with each other in many inviting combinations. Too much emphasis can not be placed on the danger of cooking vegetables. They should be cooked in as little water as possible until tender but. not soft. String beans which have been cooked and cooked develop a strong flavor, become soft and shapeless and turn a brownish green. Those which have been cooked until just, tender are delicately flavored, crisp and shapely and an attractive vivid green. Even’ vegetable is harmed in the same fashion by overcooking. Over-ripeness should be guarded against. Vegetables should reach their maturity, but should not ripen to any degree. Ripening toughens

String Beans with Onions

Two cups cooked string beans. 8 small cooked onions, 1 cup milk. 3 tablespoons butter, 1 tablespoon flour, teaspoon salt. Is teaspoon pepper. Put onions into a shallow baking dish, spreading them out so that they do not touch each other. Fill spaces between onions and beans. Melt 2 tablespoons butter, stir in flour and when bubbling slowly add milk, stirring constantly. Season with salt and pepper and pour over onions and beans. Dot with remaining butter and put into a hot oven for fifteen or twenty minutes, long enough to beat through thoroughly and brown the top slightly. Serve from baking dish.

the fibers and makes it impossible to cook the succulent vegetables as they should be. The green vegetables such as peas, green beans, spinach and asparagus are more attractive when the green color is preserved. This can be accomplished by cooking them quickly in boiling water in an uncovered kettle. The old-fashioned method of adding soda to the water to “set the color" was bad. for it had a tendency to destroy some of the vitamins. ERUPTION OF VOLCANO KILLS ONE. INJURES 4 Students Watching Sunset on Mt. Etna Are Trapped. E-' United Press CATANIA. Sicily. Aug. 3 —An 18- - year-old student is dead, one man is missing and four are recovering from injuries today from a shower of stones and small fragments of lava from the main crater of the world-famous volcano. Mt. Etna, as a result of their desire to view the sunrise from the peak which Friday resumed activity. Angelo Samperi's head was crushed by a huge rock as a party of twelve, mostly students, became panic stricken and momentarily scattered when (he activity of the voleanc suddenly increased with Tremendous roars and rumblings. Shortly afterward the party reassembled and discovered that Giovanni Bonaccorsi, 40, was missing.

TWO BRIDES-TO-BE AND A BRIDE

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bright, 548 Parker avenue, announce the f engagement, of their daughter. S&w, Miss Opal Brisrhr left> to Lawrence R. Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. F.ugene Hoffman. 4052 Park venue. The wedding will take place at St. Philip Neri church Sept. 10. Photo by Dexprimer . s*l Announcement is made of the rngagement of Miss Alice Hoover ';■% t ~ o%s? Tight), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M~' ’% Charles R. Hoover. 2340 Central avenue to Arnold S. Meyer, son flpf raWlii if Mrs. William G. Meyer. The 'WW wedding will talke place Aug. 4. f ( Photo by Dexheimer). W WzG W® Mrs. Strange Donovan Randall mk |p| was before her marriage Sunday ■# f, W Miss Ruby Gibson, daughter of **&&&%. f" w Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Gibson 601 / , ' * West. Thirtieth street. (Photo by *|k y piatt). ijpßPylMm nd bridge tea at her home. 5249 | - 4 entral avenue, in honor of Miss Miss Donaldson, daughter of Mr. \\-.% •'* v / fsV\jt v * ad Mrs. John W. Donaldson. 1142 . \ & ' '■*?//A ’est Thirty-third street, will marry ;V \ \ /' - G/'A&

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bright, 548 Parker avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Opal Bright 'left) to Lawrence R. Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Hoffman. 4052 Park avenue. The wedding will take place at St. Philip Neri church Sept. 10. 'Photo by Dexheimer). Announcement is made of the engagement of Miss Alice Hoover Tight ), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Hoover. 2340 Central avenue, to Arnold S. Meyer, son of Mrs. William G. Meyer. The wedding will talke place Aug. 4. (Photo by Dexheimer). Mrs. Strange Donovan Randall was before her marriage Sunday Miss Ruby Gibson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Gibson. 601 West Thirtieth street. (Photo by Platt).

Bridge Tea Is Given for Bride-to-Be Mrs. W'eber D. Donaldson entertained today with a linen shower and bridge tea at her home. 5249 Central avenue, in honor of Miss Melba Donaldson. Miss Donaldson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Donaldson. 1142 West Thirty-third street, will marry Kearsley Loren Urich. son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Urich. 19 West Twenty-fourth street, this month. The tea table was centered with a bowl of orchid and pink cosmos and garden flowers and lighted with cream candles in silver holders, tied with orchid and pink tulle. The shower gifts were concealed in an orchid miniature chest of drawers. The plain white tallies, monogrammed with the letter ”D,” held a picture of Miss Donaldson. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother were Mrs. Fred Donaldson, Mrs. Charles Jones, Mrs. Richard Gray. Mrs. Robert Brewer, Mrs. Telford Orbison. Miss Virginia Dunbar, Miss Margaret Macy. Miss Dorothy Peterson, Miss Martha Wood. Miss Mary Pacey, and Miss Genevieve McNellis.

WINDOW SHOPPING

An ideal costume permitting lightning changes consists of a plaited skirt of white silk, with a cardigan of green flannel, a fish-net sweater cf white wool and a pullover of the same clear green. Matching Beret and Frock A sport frock of washable silk moire has much to commend it in the way of chic, for it is sleeveless and accompanied by its own cardigan of the same material. With it is worn a charming beret made of angora wool, which matches the dress perfectly. Pajamas of Indian Print Quite the most beguiling pajamas for beach wear are made of Indian print. They have extremely wide trousers and are picturesque in the extreme. Unusual Tea Set A modernistic tea set is made of china in a most glorious shade of orange. The set is oddly shaped and has no resemblance to the ordinary tea set in form or design. On the Beach On the beach or in the sea a bathing suit of wool, which shades in wide stripes from pale yellow to deep orange, is equally at home and effective.

NEWLYWED

.si' .

—Photo by Platt. Mrs. Glenn Dunlap The wedding of Miss Thelma Harding and Glenn Dunlap took place Thursday, July 25.

NEWS OF INDIANA D. A. R.

Three chapter regents, each from northern, central and southern districts of Indiana, have been appointed by the respective directors to arrange the Tuesday afternoon program for the state conference in Gary. Oct. 8-11. Appointees are Mrs. Perry H. Clifford. Indianapolis; Mrs. Walter Clapinger. Madison, Mrs. Eva Cline, Columbus; Mrs. C. E. Strack. New Albany; Mrs. O. E. Ebbinghouse, Wabash; Mrs. A. L. Deniston, Rochester; Mrs. Robert Hicks. Cambridge City; Mrs. W. B. Dunlap. Covington, and Miss Keziah Stright, Gary. Annual memorial service will precede this program and the annual conference banquet will be held Thursday night instead of Wednesday, as in former years. * tt tt Mrs. John McFadden, director of the northern district, conferred with prospective members of a D. A. R. chapter to be formed at LaPorte at an all-day meeting held at the Bay Tree Inn, LaPorte. More than forty LaPorte women have been found eligible to become members and another meeting of the group will be held Aug. 21 at the Inn. It is planned to complete the organization in time for Mrs. James B. Crankshaw. state regent, to present a request for its authorization at the national board meeting Oct. 23, in Washington. tt tt tt Mrs. Giles Aylesworth and Mrs. E. R. Bryant will entertain members of Margaret Bryant Blackstone chapter. Hebron, at a picnic meeting in place of the regular August meeting. tt tt a Mrs. William Sherman Walker, national defense chairman, has arranged an outline for national defense programs for the coming.year. Topics which may be presented monthly, beginning in September, are: Defense of childhood, defense of youth, defense of the constitution defense of government, defense of the United States of America, defense of justice and diplomacy, defense of the army and navy, defense of individual American personality. and defense of the StarSpangled Banner. tt tt tt Miss Alice Goldthwaite and Miss Emily Goldthwaite. Marion, both COMMANDER SENTENCED U. Boat Officer Charged With Neglect. lit/ T'nited' Prmx PORTSMOUTH. England. Aug. 3. —Lieutenant Robert James Gardner. who commanded the submarine H-47 when it collided with the submarine L-12 and it with a. great loss of life, was sentenced by a court martial to be reprimanded for "not handling the submarine in such a manner as to avoid or minimize the consequences’ and for "negligent navigation." 26 JONES LAW VICTIMS Federal and County Agents Busy in Kansas. Pv T nitf/i Prrtx WICHITA. Kan.. Aug. 3.—Twentysix persons charged under the Jones : law with selling liquor, were held I today as the result of raids conducted by federal and county agents.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TRIES

former regents of General Francis Marion chapter, left Friday for a two months’ trip to Europe. They sailed on the S. S. Stalendam. a a tt Mississinewa chapter, Portland, will observe the birthday anniversary of Lydia Ann Cline Simmons, a real daughter. Aug. 24. Mrs. Simmons' died in Portland, June 7, 1923. tt a tt All chapters have been requested to follow the outline suggested by the national society in presenting activities of the organization, especially national defense work. Both national and state organizations have prescribed sVj> by 7 inches as the uniform size for year books and all chapters are requested to conform to these measurements. tt tt tt Mrs. Mary L. M. Thayer will entertain members of the Wythougan chapter. Plymouth, with a picnic luncheon at her summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee this month. it tt Miss Bonnie Farwell, Terre Haute, state chairman, has succeeded Mrs. Truman G. Yuncker, central director, as national vice-chairman of patriotic education in the central division. Miss Farwell has planned an extensive motor trip in September, to visit southern mountain schools sponsored by the D. A. R. She will be accompanied by Mrs. Yuncker and Mrs. lone Gilbert, Terre Haute. UK# Between 300 and 400 members of chapters in Indiana are engaged in arranging programs for the coming season. New year books have been completed and distributed by the following chapters: Estabrook, Rockville; White River, Washington; Margaret Bryant Blackstone, Hebron; Williamson Dunn, Hanover; Alexander Hamilton, Franklin: William Donaldson. Edinburg, and Hoosier Elm. Corydon.

BRIDE

' ' , ‘0 j ! —Photo by Platt. Mrs. Oliver James Rudolph I The marriage of Miss Mary Ellen Fisk to Oliver James Rudolph took place July 24.

Gay Dresses Arg Seen at Garden Fete / 0 BY FRANCES PAGET 'Copyright. 1929, bv Style Sources) NEW YORK. Aug. 3.—One of the smartest functions at the end of the Paris season, a correspondent writes, is always the garden party given by the Maharajah of Kapur - thala in the grounds of his charming house in the Bois de Boulogne. This year, most of the women wore printed chiffons or crepe de chine. Flower designs predominated, but there were also polka dots and ovals of all sizes, from tiny confettis to large disks. Some conventional shadow designs and a great many small leaf patterns were seen. Yellow may not have had the majority in numbers, but it stood out, because it is the season's new color, and a great deal of it was worn. Beige Next in Favor Then came beige and after that blue and pink followed by light greens and mixtures of many colors. There were a few lace dresses Madame Jacques Balsan, nee Consuelo Vanderbilt, wore a two-piece beige lace, the jumper slightly bloused and the skirt straight and pleated like a sports skirt, longer than generally seen. The Ranee of Pudukota had an almost tailored white crepe de chine gown from Vionnet, with a complicated interlaced pattern of tiny hand sewn tucks. This had a straight hem. Mrs. Drexel in Black Mrs. John Drexel was in black satin with wide incrustations of white lace and a broad brimmed black hat. Madame Ganna Walska wore a brown taffeta picture gown and a very wide trimmed cavalier hat turned up sharply in front and rolled back to show a beige underbrim. while the top in brown was trimmed with a flat curled black ostrich feather.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents, foi which send Pat- 65 3 2 tern No, Size Street City ••••••••••••••••••••••••* ••••*••••••••••••****** ••o*#•* ••••••••••••ft****••••••++**+*** Name •••••••••••••••••••••••• •••*••••••#•••••*••••••••••••••

fg|\l 6532, TRj 'w 'u** 3 gr * •*] Tj

A POPULAR DRESS S T YLE FOR THE GROWING GIRL 6532. Cravat silk was used in this instance in a blue pattern on a beige ground. Pique, plain or printed, and soft cotton prints are also suggested. The long waist portions close at the left side of the front above plaited skirt portions. The shoulder line is lengthened to form a short sleeve over the top of the arm. The pattern for this design is cut in four sizes: 6,8, 10 and 12 years. To make the dress for a 10-year size will require 2H yards of 39-inch material. To finish with binding or bias tape, as pictured in the large view, will require 214 yards lVz inch ■wide. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 15 cents in silver or stamps. MARRIAGE PROBE ASKED “Mills” to Join Unfit Reported in State. Another Lake county probe has been asked of Attorney-General James M. Ogden. This time it it investigation of the alleged marriage markets at Crown Point. Here, it was charged by Superior Court Judge Gemmill of Chicago, there are wholesale marriage mills j engaged in joining the unfit. Ogden will turn the matter over to the Lake county prosecutor for action, he said. EXCURSIONS ARRANGED Railways Will Give Rates During State Fair. Representatives of all steam railrodas entering the city met teday with the state fair borad and decided excursion rates of a fare and one-half for round trip tickets would prevail o nlines during the week of the fair. Several of the roads will run additional special excursions. __ _

C)X< Interprets V J V MODE Exaggerated void or silver flowers, lovely ? their nddness. ore o new note for home decorotivy. (A Doh-Roy (lesion.)

CAN FRANCISCO'S Chinatown, without a doubt, crams more loveliness into its five or six short blocks than does not only any other Chinatown, but any one street in the Orient, so I have been told by the Chinese themselves.

Indescribably lovely, tiny noth-, ings-at-all—a wee cluster of jade j grapes with exquisite tiny leaves—l for the huge sum of 15 cents—a I white jade penholder and ink jar for sls. Beaten out of thin gold, unalloyed ; —oddly shaped flowers for table j decorations. And across the street the same flowers twisted out of gold and silver foil! Decorations are. after all, only ideas. We found the foil one much closer to our pocketbooks, and possessing the added advantage of being throwawayable when one wearied of their glittering oddness. ILLUSTRATED for you today they exactly are—in gold! Can't you just see their decorative possibili- • ties? it tt tt AH —h—h-h, what have we done! Well, being no longer where we could sip jasmine tea overlooking San'* Francisco's beautiful bay—in the one tearoom that Chinatown boasts —and being in need of some more goofy-lovely flowers, we bought heavy gold and silver paper and MADE ’em! And the fun we had! 'Twas so much fun, and ’twas so lovely—the result—that, we just can’t keep it to ourselves. So we made an illustrated leaflet telling you how to make them. tt a Tiny Tot’s Corner THERE is so little actual area to cover that complete harmony is necessary in Petite Adorable’s outfits in order to express any elegance at all. Tiny hats are trimmed with decoupes, insertion and delicate handembroidery this season, even as dresses and lingerie. And one can dare to match little sister’s frock, hat and shoes in a way that one could never get away within an ensemble that covered “more” person! # tt a ONE or two such have decided us to mention it —beige or grey 1

Father Practices False Thrift in Keeping Boy Out of Camp

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON , The other day I heard the father of a boy say that he couldn’t think of sending his son to a camp, because it was too expensive. Then he said his wife took a tenday motor trip with some friends and I heard him bragging that it cost them about SSOO. Not only that, but before they started the two of them stocked up on new clothes to the tune of at least another S2OO. Jim is a quiet boy of 12. They live in a city apartment. He has a bicycle, goes to swim in the pool at his'father's club with his chum who lives across the hall, and they take walks together through a nearby park. But he prefers to read and go to movies. That’s the way he makes his other friends—thin friends they are, on paper, and on the screen. But they satisfy him. Must Learn Great Living He seems to be happy and contented with his life. His father blows cigaret rings and dreams of the day when Jim will be district attorney, or federal judge, or who knows, perhaps attorney-general. He is going to college and law school. I wonder how Jim’s father thinks he is going to qualify as a fit person to judge other human beings if he never gets to know real life or real people! Probably from his college contacts. But let’s see. By the time he goes 1 away he’ll be 18. He'll learn a lot i about boys then, it's true, but real' knowledge of human nature comes i before that. Group-living can not be well learned after adolescence. Needs to Meet Bovs It is when a boy is growing that he learns to adjust himself to other! people. And he learns to know j what, other people do and think. He j needs other people to develop him j while he is growing. Boys need to live with boys and 1 a lot of them. They need first-hand living and the experience it brings. Out in the open under the sky, roughing it, learning to play fair,

NormanS Blue Bird Store Set QT BLUB BIRD DISHES 6IVETg AWiW •yttK vou#. jp ot >ls-c~e* CASHORcreed OORMANg 23-T--2-4-I EAST NVAffB

georgette incrustations on navy blue georgette are inexpressably elegant! Not only do this lighten the severity of the blue, but also lend a harmonizing note for the accessories. Gray stockings, gloves and handkerchief. navy blue hat. shoes and bag. eatt Last chance to send your 2-cent stamp for the illustrated leaflet that tells you how to make those awfully clever undergarments for summer loveliness! tt tt a Au Revoir!

JULY BRIDE

—Photo by Platt. Mrs. Raymond A. Davis Miss Thelma May Broadus became the bride of Raymond A. Davis Wednesday, July 24.

Your Child

the game of give-and-take, that’s what they need. Incidentally, they are picking up a dividend of health and adding infinitely to their store of intimate knowledge. Colleges can’t do it all, even if they are lucky enough to go to college. • Camps Are Numerous There are all sorts of organized camps from $3 a week to SSO. There are numerous free organized camps, too, and then there are the good old camps where boys just club together and pay for the fishing tackle and the bacon, with someone along to keep them safe. There is a great big educational and character principle involved in camp life that is as important as Latin and trigonometry, and Gladstone later on. The city boy particulerly needs the camp experience, if it is posssible to give it to him. I can not help thinking Jim’s father is making a big mistake. PLAN LICENSE CHECK First checkup of drivers’ licenses will be made the week beginning Sunday. Aug. 25, when state police will wage a statewide safety campaign, Robert T. Humes, chief of state police, announced today. Six points will be emphasized in the campaign, Humes said: Drivers’ licenses, headlights, tail lights, horns, brakes and stop lights. Because of the impossibility of issuing the new drivers’ licenses as raipdly as applied for, state police have not attempted to make a comprehensive check-up of them, except in cases of accidents.

Then the Doctor recommended this One woman,whohadlong Almost instantly the dis- / suffered from a severe comfort stopped.” Try case of eczema, writes: Resinol yourself. The .A “For many months I was Ointment at night! W ash <%& constantly bothered. I off with Resinol Soap in r tried four or five differ- the morning! Resinol ent remedies without Soap, too, for general 088 success. Then my doctor toilet use. Also as a < WjjSjß recommended Resinol. shampoo. A talldruggistt. 1 • 1 Sample of each free. / W* !■ 111 Write Resinol, Dept. 86, L

AUG. 3. 1929

Represents Indiana at Convention Mrs. Henry Lester Smith. Bloomington. former state president of the. Indiana Federation of American Association of University Women. will represent Indiana at the triennial conference of the International .Federation. The conference will be held at Geneva. Switzerland, Aug. 7-14 and has been planned in connection with summer tours organized by Mrs, Arnold Dickson. London, the conference secretary of the International Federation. The conference celebrates the tenth anniversary of the foundation of the federation and some time will be devoted to a survey of the past record of the organization and a discussion of future possibilities of development. The program will include reports and discussions on the following subjects: The provision of international fellowship for research: methods of utilizing the resources of the, federation for the promotion of intellectual co-operation: the equivalence of academic standards; and investigation of secondary school teachers; the promotion of travel; the training of university women for careers in industry, commerce and finance and the position of university women in public services. Mrs. John T. Wheeler, Indianapolis, is filling the unexpired term of Mrs. Smith as president of the Indiana federation. Mrs. Smith, who is accompanied by her husband, dean of the department of education of Indiana university, and her family. will remain abroad for a year. Her appointment as delegate of the Indiana federation branches was made by Docent Ellen Gleditsch, president of the International federation.

Woman s Day

BY ALLENE SUMNER Because women arc over-cultured, they are more critical when it comes to finding a husband, and as a result the best educated women are single. So declared the Rev. Daniel A. Lord, chairman of the Catholic Woman’s Sodality, at their recent convention. The problem of the unmarried 5 educated woman is not anew one. But this is a rather new guess as to why she is so. Moreover, it is a guess which scothes the lady's pride a bit more than the general diagnosis that over-educated women are not. attractive to men. not: Can't Get 'Em! | It. has become almost an axiomatic belief that the more a woman knows the less S. A. has she. Which is merely another way of saying | that man only recognizes S. A. in what he is pleased to call his female j inferiors; that the minute they become his betters, he fears them. Even though this latter theory is a bit harsher than the Rev. Mr. Lord's. I fear it is a bit more correct, I have seen too many of these j too-well-educated women, supposed j to be too critical of man, fall for ; such fearful nincompoops, at the : slightest chance, to have any other j opinion. Women of all sorts, educated and uneducated, need marriage too badly, even in this age, to be able to afford to be critical. Though it’s a pretty compliment at that! tt u u Beauty Perils All is not gold that glitters, and it is possible to kill the goose that lays the golden eggs. So has discovered Dr. Henry J. Schireson, plastic surgeon of Chicago. who has made plain women beautiful and beautiful women more beautiful for some years, all by the simple little process of shortening and lengthening noses, lifting faces, snipping here and stuffing there. Now he must pay $40,000 to a Miss Sadie Holland, who claimed that the doctor told her what beautiful nice straight legs he could make of her, who did his stuff, with the result that the girl had to have both legs amputated when gangrene set in. Just one more little example of what women will do for beauty. It’s all very well for the scoffer to say that any girl who would bo en foolish as to endure pain and danger for the sake of a straighter leg only invites the disaster she gets. The scoffers haven’t learned whafl it means to live in a world without beauty—what it is for women, that is. . tt tt tt Licks 'Em Up! Here’s Caroline Bierhals, 18, attempting to get atop the world by such an outstanding feat as being world champion ice creare cone eater. Miss Caroline of New" xConsington, Pa., stowed away 100 cones in an hour and forty-five minutes. She is now receiving offers for open pay-as-you-enter-com- ' petition bouts. But she probably will learn thatbeing a champion cone eater means ; nothing at all compared to having the champion leg or foot or hair or eyes or shape or mouth.

GfeliROVE Butter tyresh Churned from c frefhOtam