Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 90, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Arlington Anticipates Fair Show Horses Being Groomed for Entrance in Annual Event. BY BEATRICE BI RC.AN Time* Woman i Pace Editor ■Jia EMBERS of the Arlington Riding Club are busy, excited and hopeful. After a summer of lulled activity, the prospect of a horse show sends them into a dither of eating, sleeping and drinking horse show preparation. The particular show claiming theii
attention now will be a part of the Indiana state fair program. Every night from Sept. 4 to 8 in the Coliseum. the prides of Indiana horsemen will be paraded in various classes. Two winners in classes last year will seek honors for the Arlington club again this year. Cynthia Test, who won the girls' class the
Miss Kurgan
last two years, will be on Mitzi, and Albert Metzger will be up on Puss-in-Boots in competition in the boys' class, which he won last year. Cynthia will pair with Bobbie Eohlen on Bernice Love. Cynthia and Bobbie have become traditional winners in pair classes at Arlington and state fair shows. Always dressed alike, their entrance into the ring is greeted with cheers. Two years ago they went to Chicago and were awarded second place against professional riders. Children Will Ride All the Metzger children will ride' at the fair. They've spent most of the summer at Charlevoix. Mich., where their parents. Mr. and Mrs Alex Metzger. have a vacation home. They didn't neglect their riding, however, for facilities there are excellent and the bridal paths beautiful. Joan Metz,cer will appear on the Statesman. Dorothy on Dotty Pat and Albert on Plies-In-Boots. Dresden Lady, Mrs. Frank Hoke's entry, will take part in her first state fair. Mrs. Hoke's enthusiasm for horse shows is bubbling over, i since she's returned from California,; where she attended the fashionable Menlo Circus Club event. Little Black Sando will wear the colors of Mrs. Orland Church. Rayon D'Or will be the entry of Mrs. August Bohlen. Groomed Fastidiously Miss Audrey Pugh, young riding | master of the club, has not decided on her mount, and K. K. Guthridge.! manager of the stables, will be represented by several entries. Carl and David Mote will be in the show j for the club. The horses are being groomed fastidiously. Their coats gleam with daily brushings. Their saddles are shined, their blankets cleaned. Every day they are trained and put through their gaits. /They're petted and fired with their Owners praise. They sense the excitement and bustle of the place, and are. so to speak, on tiptoe themselves for a show. The weekly Monday luncheons and cross-country rides were renewed this week when a group of twenty met at the clubhouse after being separated several weeks by vacation trips. Mrs. A. L. Piel and Mrs. H C. Piel will be hostesses next Monday for the luncheon and ride. Announcements of the program for the club will be made after the summer season Is over. MRS. LOUIS NeleD JR. TO HE HONOR Cl 'EST Mrs. Louis Need Jr., recent bride, will attend a kitchen shower and bridge party Friday night as the guest of Miss Ruth Flick. 1509 Barth avenue. A pink and blue eoler scheme will be used. Guests with Mrs. Need will be Misses Pearl Taylor. Velma Wise- 1 man. Alice Tucker. Edna Oossert. Mary LeFeber. Emma Supper. Virginia Bussell. Dorothy Allen, Altha Black. Dorothy Schlegel. Mary Ruth Gunckel. Minnie Wienke. Myrtle Blumberg. Margaret Albertsmeyer. Hazel Fuller. Elizabeth Pringle. Dorothy Perry and Mesdames Harry Allen, Charles Sabins. Albert Ott and Delmar Strother. I Cookies for Dessert Having a few home-made cookies on hand helps you solve the dessert pioblem these hot days. A dish of fresh or canned fruit, served alone, may make the family think you didn't spend time enough planning the dessert course. Serve home-1 mad? cookies with the fruit and they'll change their minds! Attends Conned Sessions Mrs. Russell H. Gilmore is attending the sessions of the Supreme Council of Job's Daughters in Flint, Mich.
Daily Recipe APPLE BRAN SCALLOP 6 tart apples, pared and cut in 1 4. inch slices 34. teaspoon cinnamon 1 cup sugar Juice of two lemons 1 I/a cups whole bran Arrange apples in greased baking dish. Combine cinnamon with \ cup sugar and vfipnnkle over apples. Add leSon Twee. Cover tightly and bake in hot oven > 425 degrees F.) twenty to twentyfive minutes, or until apples are tender. Cream butter, add remaining sugar, and cream together until blended. Work in whole bran evenly. Sprinkle bran mixture over apples and return to oven. Bake, uncovered, fifteen minutes longer, or until topping Is crusty. Serve hot or cold. Serves six.
High Cut Features Fall Shoes; Suede Is Favored
Left, above, a dressy suede and patent leather oxford, ornamented with cut-outs, lined with gay red leather. Second, above, an opera pump of brown suede and kid. with half-moon appliques. Third, a step-in pump of black
Recently Wed Couple to Be Given Parties The recent marriage of Miss Naomi Lyall Adams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lyall Adams of Muskegon. Mich., and formerly of Indianapolis, to Louis A. Whitesell, is the ocrasion for several parties arranged by Indianapolis hostesses. Miss Ruth Agnew, assisted by her er, Mrs. Ralph Agnew. gave a bridge party Wednesday night at her home for Mrs. Whitesell. The hostess carried out the appointments and decorations in a jade green and white solor scheme. Guests with Mrs. Whitesell were Miss Lorraine Edwards of Finlay, 0., who has been the house guest of Miss Agnew: and Mesdames Paul Green. Walter Hendrickson. Fletcher King. Gerald Martz and Hugh M. Mason. Others who attended were Misses Marcy Dirnberger, Bettty Fletcher, Helen Gorman. Frances Lyons and Delma and Deloris Vestal. The Misses Vestal will entertain Friday night at their home, 53 North Bolton avenue, with a bridal shower and bridge party for the bride. Miss Lyons will be hostess Wednesday at a bridge party.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- CO7 £2 tern No. D 6 i O Size Street City State Name
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FALL FROCK
Late summer . . . and aren't you beginning to be just a little bored with all your summer things? Doesn't your beautiful suntan begin to make your pastel sports clothes look a bit washed out? Then it is time to inject "pep" into your wardrobe with a frock that carries a j hint of fall. Fashion's latest cure for the summer doldrums is this tailored frock in one of the new ribbed crepes. Ottoman is particularly smart, especially in chestnut beige with a touch of brown in the belt and button. The exciting thing about this frock are the sleeves with their hint of fulness at the shoulders, not to mention the clever lapped seaming and panel arrangement in front. It's the perfect frock for a beginner. Size 16 requires three yards 39-inch material. Width about 14 yards. Our large fall fashion magazine contains many other easily made styles for home, sports, afternoon and evening. Also models for children. Pattern No. 5276 is designed for sizes 14. 16. 18. 20 years. 32, 34, 36, 38. 40. 42. 44 bust. * Price for pattern, 15 cents.
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
What'* on your mind? Write a tetter to Jane Jordan and tell her what it I*. Your opinion on the letter* published is solicited. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a man of 28, madly in love with a girl of 15. I am a school teacher, and that was how we got acquainted. I haven't had any dates with her, because her father objects. We were together continually when school was going on, but I can't even go downtown to see her through the week Please advise me what to do. BROKEN-HEARTED HUGH. Answer—First you should ask yourself why a grown man of 28 should prefer an immature girl of 15 to a woman near his own age. Why do you want a daughter instead of a wife? My guess is that you are timid and uncertain of yourself with your
equals, and function happily only when you're sure of the superiority of your position. It is so pitifully easy for 28 to lord it over 15. Remember that the shoddiest means of establishing your own importance is to choose a love partner whose development is so far behind your own that it is unneces-
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Jane Jordan
sary to exert yourself to keep up with her. The inequality of the ages of yourself and this child should make you pause for a period of rigid self-sxamination. B B B Dear Jane Jordon—Do you think men would stand by their wives while they carry on affairs with other men? Yet you advise the women to do that very thing. Why not tell the men to stop carrying on affairs? I have plenty of things to write about in this column, but every time I do all the answer I get is that I owe my philandering husband something like respect for my board and room, or that I imagine lam being persecuted to death. What a laugh! No wonder men deceive their wives when every one thinks it is just grand! F. L. H. Answer—l have only one ;ood reason for advising women to stick by their philandering husbands when I know full well that the husbands | would not stand by their philandering wives. That reason is economic. The husbands make the money. The wives do not. When a man philanders, he does not lose his job. When a woman philanders, she does lose her job. This is not just, but is is a fact. If a woman has her own money, or is able to go out in the business world and earn the bread and butter for herself and children, I glory in her spunk. When she can , not do this, what do you suggest as a solution? Remember, I expect you to answer this question. My dear lady, men will not forego their love affairs because I cluck at them. I do not think it is grand for men to deceive their wives. I do not think that hard-working women owe respect to philandering husbands in exchange for room and board. As long as a wife has no other meal ticket than her husband. I do not know what she can do but put up with him with as much grace as possible. Rasing Cain won't reform him. His power lies in his purse. The woman who wishes t<He in a position to tell her husband what she will and will not stand for must be economically independent. BBS D?ar Jane Jordan—l am acquainted with a woman who is the mother of a doctor. Her son is 35 or thereabouts. Whenever he has shown signs of having a sweetheart, this mother begins to bawl and continues bawling until the affair is broken up. I have been a nurse for twentyfive years. I have known flocks and gobs of doctors. I have three in my immediate family, and I hear ths merry "har har" of the son whose mother signs herself so proudly in testimony of his chastity, for he surely has put it over on his little mother. If there is a man who has reached th? age of an interne who has not had a love affair brought to full flower long before he was an interne. I do not know him. If he says otherwise, he is a liar. MOTHER-IN-LAW OF A DOCTOR. Answer—Even though the sophisticated may have some doubts about any mother's faith in her son. I think it is kinder to leave her ilI lusions alone. Don't you?
suede and lizard with a kid lacing. Fourth, brown suede and kid in semi-oxford style, buttoned attractively over a tongue. Right, above, a street oxford in gray suede with reptile and kid inlays of intri-
( Letters from other nurses on "Internes I Have Known" might be very interesting in this connection. Nurses, get out your pencils! a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am 19, going with a girl 18. We love I each other and have no desire to go with any one else, but I fear some of my spoken thoughts are turning her love away from me. I have grown careless and say I things for which I am sorry later on. She trusts me completely and I care too much for her to take advantage of her, but I think this freedom is causing me to be | careles; with my conversation. Please try to understand and suggest some way of getting a more respectful attitude before her love for me is gone. CARELESS. Answer—Your admission of your error is half the battle. Every person can do what he really wants to : do. The desire to be decent usually is followed by the fact. Wedding of Miss Wells Is Sunday Miss Louise Eickhoff entertained Wednesday night at her home. 5334 Lowell avenue, in honor of Miss Jane Wells, whose engagement to Paul Jarvis Jr., of Evanston. 111., and Kokomo, has been announced by her mother. Mrs. George M. Wells. 210 East Fifty-first street. The marriage of Miss Wells and Mr. Jarvis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jarvis Sr., of Evanston, 111., will be solemnized at 4 Sunday afternoon at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. The Rev. J. Ambrose Dunkle will read the sen-ice in the presence of the immediate families and a few friends. Miss Wells, will be given in marriage by her brother. Charles M. Wells, and Wili am Todd of Gary will be best man. Mrs. A. R. Williams. sister of the bride-elect, and Mr. Williams of Pittsboro will attend the ceremony. The bride-elect attended Butler I university, where she belonged to the Kappa Gamma sororitv, and De Pauw university. Mr. Jarvis attended De Pauw and was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity. They plan to make their home in KoI komo. Assisted by Sister Miss Eickhoff was assisted by her sister. Mrs. H. J. Eickhoff. at the picj ture shower and bridge party Wednesday night. Appointments were in pink and white and late summer blooms decorated the receiving rooms. ; Guests with Miss Wells were Mrs. Burehard Carr and Misses Mariadna Colburn. Mary Brown, Jane Carti wright and Mary Britton. Sororities . Mrs. Rex Haislup will be hostess for the meeting of Theta Tau Psi dramatic Friday night at her home. 81 North Emerson avenue. Mrs. Elmer Beanblossom will have charge of the program. Reunion at Greenfield Annual reunion of the Lowe family will be held Sunday in Riley park. Greenfield, with Beck Lowe, president, and Miss June Beckner. secretary, in charge.
Fill the Pantry Those home canned and preserved vegetables, castups, relishes, jams, conserves, pickles, marmalades and jellies. Our Washington Bureau has a packet of four bulletins that tells how. They are: 1. Heme Canning 3. Jams. Conserves 2. Catsups and Relishes 4. Jelly Making If you want these bulletins, fill out the coupon below and mail as directed: I want the packet of four bulletins on HOME CANNING AND PRESERYTNG. and inclose herewith 10 cents in coin, or loose, unranrelled U. S. postage stamps, to cover return postage and handling costs: NAME ADDRESS CITY STATE TO THE WASHINGTON BUREAU 1322 New York Ave.. Washington. D. C. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
cate design. The bow is new. Lower, left, a brown suede shoe which features a high front and side lacings. Lower, right, another suede shoe with a high front with buckled closings over a tongue.
Sunshine Club’s Annual Picnic Will Be Held Work of the Vocational Bible school under the direction of Miss Hariett V. Krause and Miss Frances E. Wallace will be on display at the annual picnic of the Children’s Sunshine Club Saturday at the Sunnyside Sanatorium. Prizes will be awarded. This event will mark the close of the school sponsored by the club for the children. Mrs. Alva Cradick, president, and Mrs. W. J. Overmire, chairman of the entertainment committee, are arranging the party. Others assisting with the affair are Mesdames David Jolly. George J. Hasley, William C. Schaefer. Harry Knannlein, Otis Carmichael and Harry Grimes. Balloons will be presented to the children and miscellaneous entertainment provided. Mrs. C. L. Bogert was hostess for a luncheon-bridge meeting of the club Wednesday at her home, 3020 East Thirteenth street. The next club entertainment will be he'd Sept. 15, when all children whose birthdays occur in September will be honored. Personals Miss Sylvia Ann Werner, daughter of Mrs. Jack Werner, 3529 Balsam avenue, and her cousin, Miss Edith Mae Buet, New York, are visting in the east. They are expected to return to Indianapolis Sunday Mrs. J. Burdette Little and Mrs. John B. Little left Wednesday lor a visit in Washington, D. C. Mj. and Mrs. George T. Purves, Robert Purves and Miss Mary Alice Purves have returned from a motor trip through Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina. While in Tennessee, they visited the Pi Beta Phi settlement school at Gatlinburg and Smoky Mountain national park. Mrs. D. O. Kearby and daughter. Miss Frances Kearby. 3920 Washington boulevard, are spending a few days at Orleans. Mr. and Mrs. Carson Jacobs and daughter of Lafayette, and Mr. and Mrs. Pierce Coapstick and daughter of Frankfort, have returned to their homes after visiting Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Lane, 1105 West Thirty-first street. Miss Helen Fitzgerald and Mrs. Ruth Eiteljorg have gone to Chicago to visit the exposition. AUXILIARY to give PROGRAM AT HOME Mrs. Gustav Mack is in charge of the program to be presented Friday afternoon by the Ladies Auixiliary of the Altenheim. Miss Lena Schramm, chairman of the hostess committee, for the annual birthday party, will be assisted by Mrs. Paul Ulrich. Miss Emma Minter and Mrs. C. Wilmanns. Miss Katie Kerz is in charge of decorations and Mrs. Charles C. Kistner. refreshments. Misses Julia Niegergal, Irma Foester, Joan Mikels and Harriet Maxwell will present the program during the afternoon. Steak Fry Is Held Misses Eve Brown and Mary Jo Dillion were in charge of the steak fry held Wednesday night by Alpha Zeta Beta sorority at Forest Park in Noblesville. The following rushees were guests: Misses Opal Jeffries, Betty King, Mildred Allen, Agnes Campbell. Leota Riordan, Mary Wilson. Vi Mason, Mary Matthews. Dorothy Grismore and Margaret Schofield.
BY' PRUNELLA WOOD '['ALL shoes comes along with a determination to display a high cut—flattering to any foot and a boon to the one that lacks much instep beauty—and a great to-do about suede, especially in brown. Not that plain suede is anything very exciting, but suede trimmed elaborately with patent leather, reptile skins and colored kid inlays or appliques makes a verji neat shoe. a U THE oxford that shod the feet of the nation from dawn to dawn again last year still is in good shape for a fresh season. However, lovers of the opera pump will find that much effort has been put on that model by the designers of the new lines, and j those who dote on strapped shoes will find straps that they never saw before. They are placed high, wide and handsome literally, and often sport a bow or buckle. nan BOTH the brown and gray shoes show a tremendous ! range of shades. Some of the former take on winish or mousy shades, and in the latter you can choose tints that verge on gray, brown, blue or green, in the light or dark models. MISS MARY VELONA WILL BE HONORED Misses Anna and Lucille Cringle will entertain Sunday night at their home, 725 Lexington avenue, with a kitchen shower for Miss Mary Velona. The marriage of Miss Velona. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Velona, 714 Lexington avenue, will take place Sept. 3. Pink and blue appointments will be used and the lawn lighted with Japanese lanterns. Guests will include Misses Anegline Gentile. Mary, Frances and Rose Sgroi. Petrina Pizzo. Mary Folgelson, Lena Velona. Josephine Mercurio, Alveria Fosso. Madaline. Ida and Magaline Caito and Catherine Ferraro; Mesdames j Theresa Velona. Nina Modaffair | Laura Martinelli and Lucille Sicnolfi. Eggs in Plaec of Meat Eggs can take the place of meat 1 and other heavy foods on your j summer menus. Cold boiled eggs | go far toward dressing up a salad.; That old favorite, deviled eggs and a bowl of potato salad, is as nice a thing as you can serve for supper on a warm night. Sensible Heels When you buy your new fall footwear. be sure to include at least one pair of walking shoes with sensible heels. If you can't bear to j wear heels that are absolutely flat, at least see that they are no more than 14 inches high. Party Given for Son Mrs. Dora Becker entertained with a party Tuesday night in honor of her son Russell's birthday. She was assisted by her daughter. Mrs. John C. Hall and Mr. Hall. Forty guests attended. hmb Member of the N R A aumneaaaau nkiifi' The Standard Ware Experienced A Operators Each head MT waved to reveal X f character and • < distinction. ■ ! Waves. *l.Ol 9mJuHL Shampoo OP Both A A j or Set LoC fo r ~,44C | ______ Brine i'riend _____ Hollywood Famous Alvetta ‘Push-up" Paris Vlf Marie Ware Ware "Push-up” Ware i $2.00 $3.00 $6.50 2 for *5.01 5 for *3 01 2 for *6.31 OP Manlrure, Marcel of JJC Eyebrow Arch <J)C Oh*ATi— PERMANENT I Phone LI-07.W ‘ ■■“■OPEN EVERY EVENING™""
SHop for Plain Mending Proves Success; Boon to Busy Housewives of City ‘Nancy’ Lengthens School Frocks, Darns Socks, Turns Frayed Shirt Collars and Cuffs—and Prospers. BY HELEN LINDSAY JUST the plain mending that women have to do. but dislike so heartily, is the business of one of the most unusual shops in Indianapolis. This is "Nancy's Mend Shop." at 2251 North Meridian street Here the proprietor, who admits she merely is "an old-fashioned woman who doe.n't mind doing prosaic work." comes to the aid of busy wives and mothers, bachelors, and all the hast of people who have everyday mending which needs attention. School frocks are lengthened; frayed shirt collars and cuffs are turned; socks are darned; table linens are mpnded. The proprietor of the shop finds that the depression days have increased her business; many Indianapolis housewives are having clothes mended
that in more plenteous years would have been discarded. She mends blankets and bed linens; she glues broken pieces of pottery; and probably the most unusual service offered by the shop is the polishing of the family silver. There have been no exquisite .’.aces brought from grand collections to be mended in the little shop; no imported linens that must be darned carefully to preserve their fading beauty. Although such service is available in Nancy's Mend Shop. Nancy finds that the mending that Indianapolis wants done is just the even-day kind. "Just what every woman needs to do. but hates," says Nancy. bob Perfume , Named After French Novel IN 1931 the French novel. "Vol de Nuit” won the French Prix Femina. Now Guerlain is making an
equal impression on women with a French perfume bearing the same name. The name of the perfume was inspired by the romantic novel by Antoine de Saint-Exupor. Added interest Is being shown in the perfume slnee news has been given that the book has been filmed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. with Helen Hayes. Clark Gable. Lionel and John Barrymore as stars of a large cast. The movie will be shown at the Palace theater within a few weeks. B B B B B B Booklet Tells Sears, Roebuck History A SOUVENIR book giving in detail the story of the founding of the first Sears. Roebuck store, and tracing the progress to the present time, is being issued to special patroas of the store throughout the country- Included in the illustrations of the book is a "pop-up" renter illustration of the Sears building at the Century of Progress exposition. Only one retail store of the 380 maintained throughout the United States by Sears is pictured in the booklet. This is the Indianapolis branch, onp of the largest and finest. According to infoimation printed in this book, the idea for the vast mail order and retail store business conducted now by Sears. Roebuck Aa Cos. was born in a tiny frame station building at North Redwood, Minn, in 1886. The young station agent, Richard W. Sears, attempted to sell watches shipped to the North Redwood jeweier, who was overstocked. He wrote letters up and down the railroad to men he knew, telling them of the watches. When he sold the supply in a short time, he orderrd more. Beginning with this watch sale, he started the first of the mail order stores, taking as a partner a young man from Indiana. A. C. Roebuck. From that partnership grew the present great chain of stores, located in practically every large city in the United States.
Meridian Hills Club to Hold Entertainment for Families
Another of the Thursday night family entertainments will be held tonight at Meridian Hills Country Club with dinner, bridge and dancing forming the entertainment. Dinner at 6 will be followed by bridge at 8:30 and dancing at 9. Entries in the club's annual tennis tournament are due Saturday, and drawings for the first round matches will be announced next Monday. The matches will be played off by Friday. Sept. 1. Following rounds will be played Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 2 and 3, and finals are scheduled on Labor day. The tournament will be divided into four divisions, singles for players under 16, singles for players over 16. singles for girls of all ages, and doubles for all ages. A series of six tennis lessons began Tuesday under the direction of Marshall Christopher, instructor. Groups of five or more are being trained by him on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. Appointments
A Day’s Menu BreakfastBaked rhubarb, cereal cooked with chopped figs, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Casserole o? spring vegetables. brown bread and cottage cheese sandwiches. apple sauce, soft ginger cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — English mutton chops, scalloped potatoes, carrots Julienne, salad of cucumbers and celery in lime jelly, pineapple charlotte, milk, coffee.
Exceptional Terms on American Beauty" adjustable automatic electric iron The best iron made Q S-l down balance A per month and One Dollar Allowance lor Your Old Iron In this new "American Beauty” the heat is automatically | maintained at exactly the temperature desired. Li Just set the control for the kind of work to be 9 done. Then proceed with your ironing. m No time is lost in putting the plug on or off. nor waiting for this iron to /W heat up. fUffi Naturally it does the work easier, quicker and better. Chrome finish, of course. No danger of burning your ironing / board if interrupted while ironing, because thia iron cannot overheat A safe, durable, beautiful and econominal electric iron. Take advantage of this liberal offer now. Bring or send in your old iron and get anew "American Beauty” today; or phone us and we will deliver one to your home. INDIANAPOLIS POWER & LIGHT.COMPANY
—AUG. 24. 1933
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Mrs. Lindsay
; should be made with Marshal! . Knox Jr. Mrs. Charles M. Weaver, August \ golf chairman for women, is arranging the guest day tournament for Wednesday. She will be assisted by Mrs. Sam W. Hook and Mrs. Don Jenkins. Thp tournament will bo medal play with handicap. PERMANENTS French Tonic Steam Permanent $4 Complete With Shampoo and Pu*h-Cp Our Stand- Tonic and ird Oil Oil Wave. “Heed- romplM * *ompiete *‘Rjsky . . Wlth wlth 1 I6SS 10 shampoo Shampoo IQ Pay * n lX‘“ I ,n l Pay tare” $2 $3 less” Brine a 1 Brine a Friend ! Friend j —,\ 2 for *2.01 I 2 for *3.01 .. ANY IMV j The new NATIONAL RKCOVFRT ACT REALTY CODF. will he signed The , newspaper* published the report that a minimum price of J. 1.00 for permanent j waring is beine proposed. You ran *tlU eet fours at our present low I prices. I BEAUTE-ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Illinoi* and Wa*hinrton SU. With or Without Appointment L*-**^ o U
