Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 103, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1932 — Page 7

SEPT. 8. 1032-

Dinner to Be Held for Bridal Pair Francis Traill Hodges will entertain tonight with a dinner party at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in honor of Miss Sarah Margaret Moore and Fletcher Hodges Jr., the host’s brother, who will be married Saturday at the Second Presbyterian church. The table will be centered with a plateau of pink Place cards will carry out the bridal theme and baskets of randies will mark each place. Guests will include the bridal party and: Mr: Jesse Janes Garrion, matron of honor the Misses Catherine Corson of Brooklyn. N. V Margaret White. Summit, N J ; Katharine Stryker. New York;. Dorothy Anne Rucker and Mrs Oscar Jo-e Jr., bridesmaids; John Mason Moore, John Fletcher. O car Jo-e Jr.. James Cunning. ushers, and Robert Oeddes. The host will be best man at the wedding. The bride's father. Arthur C. Moore, will give a bridal dinner in honor of the couple Friday night.

Personals

Charles M. Leslie. 406 North Gladstone avenue, and daughter, Mrs. E. P. Endsley, and Richard Endsley, haye returned from a two weeks’ visit with Mrs. Cora Walker of Columbus. 0., and Mr and Mrs. James Holden of Buckeye Lake, O. Miss Sarah Margaret Le Gore has returned from a three months' tour of Europe, visiting Paris, Switzerland, the north Italian lakes, the Austrian Tyrol, the Dolomites, and southern Germany. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt F. Pantz.er, 4525 North Delaware street, are at the Roosevelt while in New York, Alan W. Boyd, 532 East Fiftyeighth street, is in New York. Miss Pauline Anderson of Ft. Worth, Tex., is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Zried. 1733 North Meridian street. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Lomasters, 815 Tecumseh place, have returned from a several days’ trip to Chicago Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Barrett, 3598 North Pennsylvapia street; Mrs. Ida Langsenkamp and Paul Shaffer have returned from a vacation at Lake Wawasee.. Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Hall, 4833 Guilford avenue, have as their guests, Frank L. McNutt and daughters, Frances, Margaret, Mary Jane and Barbara of Oak Park, 111. Mrs. Albert E. Davis. 51 West Forty-second street, has returned from New York, where she visited her daughter, Mrs. Donald B. Woodward and Mr. Woodward. Dr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Warfel, 4817 Broadway, have returned from Hyannis, Mass., where they spent, a vacation. Miss Martha Jane Baker, daughtei of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Baker, 5155 North Capitol avenue, left today for De Pauw university. Miss Jeanne Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Edwards, 530 East Twenty-fifth street, will leave this week to enter the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. Charles M. Leslie, his daughter, Mrs. E. P. Endsley, and her son, Richard Endsley, 406 North Gladstone avenue, have returned from a visit in Columbus, 0., with Mrs. Cora Walker, and from Buckeye lake, 0., where they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Holden. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Van Nuys, Grandview drive, were guests during the holiday week-end of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H. Parke of South Bend. Miss Martha Tewalt of Vincennes is visiting at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house at Butler university this week before going to Urbana to continue her studies at the University of Illinois. Miss Tewalt. formerly attended Butler. Mrs. Edith Robinson who has been spending the summer with Mrs. W. B. Robinson of Vincennes will leave soon to spend the winter with her daughter. Miss Edith Robinson at New York. Miss Ida B. Whilhite has returned after a visit with her sister, Mrs. Harve Oliphant. of Vincennes. Mrs. Otto Meyer and son Fritz, 20 West Forty-second street, have returned from Lake Maxinkuckee, where they spent the summer. Miss Margaret Stark, daughter of Paul Stark, 1 East Thirty-sixth street, has gone to Bloomington to enroll in Indiana university. She will be a freshman. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Fischer, 18 East Fortieth street, are in French Lick to attend the Kiwanis convention which will open today. Mrs. Cone Barlow and children, 4465 North Delaware street, have returned from Lake Maxinkuckee, where they spent the summer. Mrs. James W. Lilly. Golden Hill dri' e, arrived Wednesday from New York, where she spent three weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Utterback, 1229 Hanna avenue; Misses Ann Lepple and Faye Schantze. have! returned from a ten-day motor trip through the east and Canada. Mr. and Mrs. William A Tingler, 117 Hampton drive, are cruising on the Great Lakes.

Card Parties

September circle. Holy Cross Altar Society, will sponsor card parties this afternoon and evening at the school hall. All games will be played. A card party and supper will be held tonight at the Little Flower auditorium, Thirteenth and Bosart streets. Lavelle Gossett Auxiliary 908, Veteran of Foreign Wars, will have a euchre and bunco party at 8:30 Friday at the past hall. King avenue and Walnut street. Mrs. William Welch is chairman, assisted by Mrs. Charles R. Michael. STATE PEXWOMEX TO HOLD MEETING The Indiana branch. National League of American Penwomen, will meet at 10 Saturday. Sept. 17. in the clubrooms of the Fletcher American bank. Mrs. L. D. Owens, president, will be in charge of the business meeting. Given State Post Miss Elizabeth Rainey has been appoint parliamentarian for the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs by Mrs. Adah O. Frost, state president.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department. Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- Q£? •} tern No. O D O Size Street - City State Name

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FROCK WITH CAPELET COLLAR j A delicious little model is this. It has the becoming capelet neck- | line, with a smart difference. And isn't the looped sash a youthful idea? The skirt is exceedingly simple with extreme smugness over the hips, extending into a length-giv-ing panel at the front and the back. Style No. 863 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3ti yards of 39-inch material .with l'/a yards of 39-inch contrasting. . It's stunning for afternoons or for informal evenings in chiffon prints, ! chalky crepe silks or chiffon voile ; prints. Our Summer Fashion Magazine | will help you economize. Prize, 10 I cents. Price of pattern 13 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. DEMOCRATIC CUJB WILL HOLD DANCE Plans for the garden party and dance to be given by the Thirteenth Ward Young Men's Democratic Club at the Athenaeum, Saturday night. Oct. 1, have been announced by the general chairman. Daniel J. O'Neill Jr. The musical entertainment will be under Hie direction of Lerov Hunter of the Rhythm Kings orchestra. An added attraction will be a floor show featuring the students of Mrs. Norma Koster, who will appear in short song and dance acts. Assisting itfr. O'Neill are: J. C. Rautenberg Jr., director of ticket sales, and E. A. Oliger, who has charge of planning floor arrange--1 ments and special features. 0. E. S. CHAPTER ” TO HOLD MEETING Naomi auxiliary. Order of the Eastern Star, will meet Friday afternoon in Masonic temple. North i and Illinois streets. Mrs. Anna Thompson will be the hostess. A playlet will be presented, in charge of Mrs. Harry Halter, enter- | tainment chairman. The program also will include a duet by Mrs. Gertrude Wald and I Mrs. Catherine Harakus. accompanied by Mrs. Harry Haislup. Those taking part in the play are: Mesdames Mathilda Tschudi. Helen Mitcham. Blanche Pierce. Leona Bvrkett. Etta Johnson. Bessie Wtkoff. Ethel Wallace. Anna Guth. Genevieve Bard. Walter Fuller. Harrv Halter. Josephine Wishmier and Roy Craig. MRS. DROEGER TO BE PARTY HOSTESS Mrs. Georg? Droegcr. 2120 South Emerson avenue, will be hostess tonight at a bridge and bunco party for members of the Alpha chapter of Delta Tau Omega sorority. Decorations in green and gold will carry out the sorority colors. Chapter Plans Dance Plans for a Founder's day dinner and dance Oct. 8 at Whispering Winds will be discussed tonight by Alpha chapter of Rho Delta sorority to meet at the Y. W. C. A. City Girl to Marry The marriage of Miss Carrie Henninger. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Henninger. to Watson Quillin, 2414 Stuart street, will take piace today at Kingsport, Vt.. where the couple will live.

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Bridge-Fete Will Honor Bride-Elect Miss Clara Foxworthy, who will be the only attendant at the wedding of Miss Gladys Hooker and Edward A. Troy of Hammond. Sept. 17. will entertain tonV/ht with a bridge party for the bride-elect at her home. 578 Middle drive. Woodruff Place. , Fall garden 'flowers and tapers will be used to decorate the entertaining rooms. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. M. K. Foxworthy. Guests with Miss Hooker will Include her mother, Mrs. Fred N Hooker, and: Mrsdames Edward Troy, Phillip A. Mili ler, Marvin L. Lugar. Harold B. Magee. ; William Walker, John Sloan Smith. Robert ■ I Boyer. W. Dale Evans, Edwin H. Gable, Ross T. Ewert, Roland Schmedel, W. Brewer Graham Otey Benty end Paul Morton of Lebanon and the Misses Jean Richardson, Betty Bowman, Maude Ann Searcy, Wollery, Dorothy Beightol. Grace Avels and Louise Troy. The wedding will take place at J the University Park Christian i church at 4:30. Albert Troy, brother of the bridegroom-elect, will be best man. The bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred N. Hooker, will give a bridal dinner Sept. 16 in honor of the | couple. Mrs. Brown to Be Honored at Bridge Party A farewell bridge party in honor of Mrs. Robert M. Brown will be given tonight by the Misses Constance Roche and Lucille Ratcliff at the Ratcliff home, 4249 Fairview terrace. Mrs. Brown, who formerly was ! Miss Gertrude Wysong, wall leave soon for residence at Marion. Other guests will be Mesdames I Joel Wilmoth, Thomas F. McNutt. George Walker, V. H. Brainard and s the Misses Lela Belle Shipman and Dortha Berger. DISCARD FOOD WITH UNNATURAL ODOR If* a food has the slightest unnatural odor, or sign of decay, do not can or cook it. It isn't enough to dispose of the affected part. The contamination is just as likely to be present in the rest of the meat, fruit or vegetable. Poisoning from contaminated food is much too prevalent for any one to run a risk. If there is an unpleasant odor about a can, when I you open it, destroy its contents at once. Never risk using them. Tasting a canned product and finding the flavor agreeable doesn’t prove that the food is safe. If there is the least unnatural odor, discard it. ALUMNAE COUNCIL TO MEET SEPT. IS Executive board of the Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will meet at 10 Tuesday, Sept. i3, in the woman's parlor of the Fletcher American National bank. Mrs. G. B. Taylor, incoming president, will j be in charge. Plans will be discussed for a ; party to be given Sept. 24. LIONS GROUP OPENS YEAR'S ACTIVITIES The year’s activities of the Woman's Lions Club began Wednesday with a luncheon-bridge at the home of Mrs. Karl B. Mayhall, 2339 North New Jersey street. New officers were in charge. Honor New Principal George Fisher, new principal of School 58, was honored at a dinner given Wednesday night by teachers of the school at the Kopper Kettle in Morristown. Mrs. Fisher and her son and Miss Maude W. Wertz, anew teacher at the school, were also special guests. First. Meeting Set Mu Phi Epsilon, national musical honorary society, will hold Its first business meeting this year at 7:30 Sept. 13 at the north building of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of MuSic. Hostess to Sorority Miss Ruth Harrig. 262 North Temple avenue, will be hostess for a business meeting of the Alpha chapter, Phi Tau Delta sorority, at 8:30 Friday night. Hostess to Club Mrs. Francis Artist. 4250 East Thirty-fourth street, will be hostess Friday for a luncheon meeting of the Stitch and Chatter Club. Beta Chapter to Meet ‘ Beta chapter. Delta Tau Omega | sorority, will meet at 8 Friday night ; at the Antlers. Meet With Leader Rho Zeta Tau sorority will meet ; at 8 Friday at the home of the president, Mrs. Helen Raney. Try to Get at It There are nearly 300 feet of concealed piping in the w'alls of the average two-story house.

THE INDIANAPOLIS BIBLE INSTITUTE i I. B. I. I „ (Undenominational) 1.. M *ii i—LJ. Semester begins Friday. Day Hasses. Affiliated with the Evangelical Teachers' Training Association ' Next semester begins Sept. 0. W’,;.*. We teach the whole BIBLE from Genesis to Revelation. For particulars call at office. STJ STATE I.IFE BLDG., or rhon e LI. 8287

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

lEAN HARLOW REBEL IN SCHOOL

Defied Teacher and Won Point; Hazed by Her Mates

Jean Harlow at 3

This is the second of four stories on the life of Jean Harlow, the famous platinum blond of the movies—first married at !6—whose second romance has been ended by the suicide of her husband, Paul Bern, motion picture executive. By SEA Service A BLUE-EYED girl with wavy hair the color of white gold stared rebelliously at a low table on which were displayed dozens of flat-heeled shoes, then twirling defiantly about, stalked away on the French heels of her own dainty slippers. It happened six years ago in one of the small parlors at Ferry Hall, an aristocratic old school for girls in Lake Forest, Chicago's most elusive suburb. School just had resumed and the students were being summoned, one at a time, into the impromptu shoe salon, where, under the sharp eyes of the head mistress, they were being fitted to the heel-less, “sen ble” shoes they were required to wear. The head mistress stared after the retreating girl, angry, perplexed. Her ears Still rang with the latter’s reckless, “I won’t wear such hideous shoes; I’ll go home first.” During all the years of her head mistressing, she had never encountered such rebellion. Yet it is an interesting commentary that, for the rest of the school year, the girl went around in her own high-heeled slippers. That girl, as you may have guessed, was Jean Harlow, the screen’s original platinum blond, whose first romance ended in a divorce court a year and a half ago and whose second husband was found dead by his own hand two months after their marriage.She was just 15 then, a freshman. On the school register she was listed by her real name, Harlean Carpentier. • n a HER mother, Mrs. Jean. Harlow Cgrpentier, a young and comely divorcee who lived in Waukegan, an industrial town

THURSTON TO OPEN ENGAGEMENT HERE Famous Magician Will Play His First Movie House Run in This City at the Indiana, Starting Friday, 'THURSTON, the famous hocus-pocus man, and his. not one but many Friday*** ° tnCkS ’ W Ibe th<? Stage attraction at th e Indiana beginning ! The art which Thurston practices for the amusement and mvstifi' > ation of his constantly growing public, is the oldest art in the world m “ atlon anri TJ“ rsto ,? , ls the of a lon e line of famous necromancers and he and they, all learned their craft through apprenticeship. ’ Who was the first magician? Heavens knows. Probably A'dam when ?r e omTnto '' “ “ the trade ™ han ‘ W on-palS on-

Tennyson tells of Merlin, the en- | chanter, and there was Simon Magnus and Friar Bacon, and there were all kinds of conjurors and tricksters in the Middle Ages. Wenceslaus, king of Bohemia, had a deft wight in Zeito. who was said to chop off heads and restore them to t v ir rightful bodies again. Fawkes of England made a fortune thumbing coins. Yeates, Pinchback and Comus went on where he left off. and Anderson, the famous "Wizard of the North.” and the French genius. Robert Houdin. who changed all the hanky-panky and who discovered ‘levitation.” Thurston knows all the old world tricks. He has studied the fakirs in India, the exorcists in China, the warlocks and wizards of the African jungles, and he has gone on, and with the aid of modern science he has done amazing things, things the old palmists never dreamed. “I would not deceive you for the world.” says this master of the mysteries. But he does, and makes j his audiences like it. People say they don't like to be deceived, but they do like it when an amiable and suave deceiver like Thurston I does the deceiving. For it's all in the way of am use - 1 ment, And of amazement. And

With her mother, always her “pal'*

some fifteen miles north, had brought her there a few' days before. Earlier, they had lived in Kansas City, w'here Jean was born on March 3, 1911. Mrs. Carpentier’s husband—Jean's father —was a physician. The maternal grandfather w'as a wealthy real estate dealer, who adored the blond, blue-eyed child. Asa child, Jean spent her summers at her grandfather's summer home on the Missouri river. Flowers surrounded the house, but the child took no more interest in them than she did in her dolls, which were stored aw'ay carefully on a shelf as soon as she received them. It was the livestock that attracted her; ducks, lambs and—most of all—three little pigs that kept her busy day after day. Her grandfather bought her a small red wagon and harness for the three pigs, and Jean drove them all around the place. n u u AS Jean grew older, she still preferred her own company tn that of boys. She wouldn’t have anything to do with the brothers of the few girls she knew. And when Jean entered Ferry Hall, she still felt pretty much the same way about boys. Schoolmates who spent weekends with he. at Jean's mother's modest bungalow in Waukegan understood afterwards that it was her grandfather w'ho defrayed the cost of her expensive education. For Ferry Hall then, as for the preceding half century, was a favorite private school among the daughters of Chicago’s and Lake Forest’s wealthy and socially registered frrftilies. At first Harlean’s blond beauty didn't blend well w-ith her new background. The story of the shoes hurt her in the eyes of her classmates, who continued to clump around in their awkward oxfords. She was too prettyl. For one so

J that is modern magic, the art this descendant of the Enchanter Mer- ! lin practices—the art of fabricated I amazement. I In addition to Thurston on the ! stage, the Indiana also w'ill offer Paramount’s new fall hit, “70,000 j Witnesses,” featuring Charlie Ruggles,'Phillips Holmes, Dorothy Jordan and Johnny Mack Brow’n. It deals with the baffling mystery j surrounding the murder of a foot-ball-player during a game witnessed by 70.000 people, and the attempt to solve it. ■ Indianapolis theaters today offer; “Blondie of the Follies” at the Palace. “Down to Earth” at the Apollo. “Love Me Tonight” at the Circle, and “Bring 'Em Back Alive” at the Indiana.

PERMANENT WAVES Our Popular Standard Wave ,v ware the hick- 4 rt qIIaI it r. made Wk ■ p - mins the finest of J Miy materials. ad m mis- u lerrd hr export prr- • [©, manent wire operators. 25c—FIH6ER~WA>E~25c BRING A FRIEND , Famous Hollr- | AWlta Paris wood Marie Vis Po'h-t’p Push-fp Ware . Ware Ware $3.00 $2.50 $5.00 3 far S3.fU * for 53.31 I 3 for SS.Qf PERMANtNT SYSTEM Pnono T.t. ,un wAITUtfCAlt Rooserelt Bide. ttAITIWE

young, she seemed too sophisticated. Asa result, when the new girls were initiated, the old girls singled her out for the butt of most of their practical jokes. They made her wear her pale gold curls in a score of tightlybraided pigtails. They smeared her pink skin with grease blackened with soot. They marched her on to the campus where the boys from Lake Forest college and the academy, watching proceedings from the sidewalk, might hurl good-natured gibes at her appearance. Before the Thanksgiving holidays arrived, however, the older girls began to warm toward her. They discovered that in spite of her worldly veneer, she was only an unsophisticated girl. She had never had a boy friend, and her best girl friend was her mother. Her lack of experience with boys made her a willing, even an eager, confidante for all the girls in her dormitory. The wide-eyed, almost, breathless way she listened to their stories went a long way toward establishing her popularity in the school. a a a ALL the while that her star was rising with her schoolmates, .it was waning with her teachers. It was a source of unending mortification to them that, though she skimmed over and slighted her lessons, she recited them perfectly/ Against their will, they were forced to give her a succession of E's and G pluses. The only teacher at Ferry Hall said to have “liked Harlean” was Miss Brown, dramatics teacher. She recognized the girl's ability as an actress.

Woman Wills $30,000 of $120,000 Estate to Friend

Mary J. Procter Bequeaths $5,000 to Hospital and $5,000 to Church. Largest single bequest in the will of Mrs, Mary J. Procter, filed for probate Wednesday, is $30,000 to a friend. Mrs. Margaret McNutt, 53 West Forty-ninth street. She is the wife of Harry F. McNutt, treasurer of the Union Trust Company. Mrs: Procter, widow of James E. Procter, Indianapolis business man, died Sunday at her home, 3612 Washington boulevard. The Bankers Trust Compny has been appointed executor of the will,

ENNA JEITICK SHOESy^WOMEN A WIDTHS >/e\ V AAAAA TO s"a S \ 5 1 E 5 llpl ■ 1 formerly 15 and. *6

A school rebel at 14.

When it came time for her to select the cast for the school's annual spring play, "The' Winter's Tale,” she disregarded the tradition which awarded leading roles only to seniors and juniors and chose Harlean for the part of the Princess Perdita. Throughout Harlean's first year at boarding school, her mother was a frequent visitor at Ferry Hall. The bond between mother and daughter was clearly recognized. Usually when Mrs. Carpentier started back to her home in Waukegan. Harlean and a schoolmate accompanied her. Week-ending at khe Carpentiers became one of the school’s most coveted pleasures. Mrs. Carpentier Was young and understanding. She was beautiful. She was modern. When HarleaA and her guests, contrary to school rules, drew forth their cigarets and lighted them, she did not comment. Then one day news came to Harlean school that her mother w r as to remarry. Her new' husband w'as Marino Bello, former Chicago hotel man. Following the marriage, she moved to a cozy though unpretentious little house in Highland park, closer to Lake Forest. It was about this time that romance first entered Harlean's life. One day in the dramatic class, Addah Jeannette (“Jada” to her friends) Leland, petite, darkhaired junior from Detroit, leaned over and asked her if she would like to go to a dance at the Drake hotel in Chicago the following Saturday night with a boy named “Chuck” McGrew'. Next The platinum blond's first romance.

which bequeaths an estate valued at $120,000. Bequests to friends and relatives total $50,000. The Riley hospital receives $5,000; Plymouth Congregational church, Sixteenth and Delaware streets, $5,000, and Betty Meadow's, housekeeper for Mrs. Procter, $2,000. The will directs that furnishings of the Procter home be given to charity, including bequest of a piano to the Wheeler Rescue Mission and a phonograph to the Marion county infirmary. Remainder of the estate will form a trust fund, with the Bankers Trust Company as trustee, from which loans areto be made to worthy students, to be repaid w'ithin five years after graduation.

PAGE 7

WATSON URGES 1 MORE ECONOMY Increased Revenue Needed. Senator Asserts. By Time* Special WASHINGTON. Sept. B.—Further revenue-raising measures must be adopted by the next congress to balance the budget, and more economies are necessary, Senator James E. Watson of Indiana said here Wednesday, following a conference on the 1934 budget. Tax returns under the new revenue bill have been disappointing so far. it was said at the conference of commerce, interior and agriculture department officials with Budget Director J. Clawson Roop. Although he thinks no general revision of the revenue act will be necessary at the next session, Watson said that he expected to see several amendments made to raise additional money. “It must, however, be the business of congress to re duce expenditures and keep appropriations at a minimum." he declared. LENIENCY TO WOMAN ON LIQUOR CHARGE Ex-School Teacher Gets Suspended Sentence in Sheaffer’s Court. Mrs. Dorothy Costella. Hanover college graduate and former school teacher, was shown leniency teday by Municipal Judge William H. Shcaffer when convicted on a blind tiger charge. Fine of SIOO and costs and a thirty-day prison term were suspended on condition that Mrs, Costella go to the home of her father in Mitchell. Ind. Her alleged partner in illicit liquor traffic, James 'A. Lennox, 1735 East Raymond street, who asserted ihat gallantry prompted him to claim liquor found by raiding police in the Costella home. Aug. 16*. was given a SIOO fine and costs and a thtrty-day penal farm term, all suspended except S3O costs. However. he was unable to pay and will be compelled to serve thirty days. Mrs. Costella, who said that she and her husband parted eight months ago, testified teday the liquor was her property, but equipment for making it was owned by her husband. PAY SLICE IS MAPPED $46,000 Is Taken Off Expenses of State Highway Commission. State highway commission today had completed anew salary schedule foi members and employes under a plan created by the special session of the legislature, to become effective Oct. 1. It is expected that the changes will effect an annual saving of $46,000. Last year the pay roll was $846,000. John J.-Brown, highway department director, suffered a cut in pay from $7,500 a year to $6,018.75. Commission members’ pay was cut from $lO a day to $9.15. *

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COULD NOT GET A NIGHT’S REST Tired Every Morning—Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-, pound Helped Her to Sleep

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