Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1937 — Page 11

WEDNESDAY) JULY 21, 1087

95

Find Places | _ Ready for Trip to South

In Political Life, Advice

Federation Women Urged To Work for “Good Government.”

By United Press ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, July 21. —Business and professional women were urged today to seek ‘positions of importance” in political parties in order to accomplish “the fundamental purposes” of their federation, Political opportunities open to women were outlined at the convention of the National Federation of Business and Professional Wi n’s Clubs by the organization's n= mittee, on political techniques, headed by Kauhryn Starbuck of Saratoga Springs, N. Y. The report said the federation itself should remain a nonpolitical organization but that its members should attempt to gain “important positions in all political parties” in order to “permeate every political party with the ideals and practices of good government that we have iearned through our federation work.” Women in such positions, the ve- | port continued, “should never be | under the slightest suspicion of ac- | tivity incompatible with loyal federation membership.”

Mrs. Dorothy Dunn of Washing- | Dude Ranchers Trade Cowboy Clothes for Blue Denim Jeans

ton, D. C, chairman of the legisla- | five committee, urged that federa- | tion members “constantly watch all | types and kinds of legislation in- |

troduced into state legislatures.”

Opposes “Discrimination” | Gone are the flamboyant days

The federations 1937-38 legislative | selves in cowboy regalia. program, she said, included:

against pusiness and professional women, including the clerical classification with emphasis on the repeal ' our city clothes as soon as we leav of Section 213 of the National geon- | ————— omy Act.” [ . Sl 2. Extension of the merit system, | \’ adequate support for the women's) JANen ug 10W cr and children’s bureaus, and support! > Nez of public education, including Fed- | | 0 Be Gn cn tor eral aid. 3. Support of neutrality measures, | / v R legislation empowering the State! Martha Scott Department to negotiate trade | Se —. treaties, adherence of the United! . States to the permanent court of | Misses Bobby Jo and Jean Vestal, international justice. | 344 Whittier Place, are to entertain 3. The federations legislative | With a linen shower at 8 study program, she said, includes | tonight for Miss Martha Rose Scott. “reorganization of the Federal ad-| Miss Scott is to be married Saturministrative machinery to promote day to Edgar H. Baum in the Irvefficiency and economy; housing and | ington Methodist Church. slum clearance; Government control | Mrs. A. P. Vestal is to assist her

of the manufacture and sale of food, | daughters. The home is to be deco- |

drugs and cosmetics, and the Lu- tated with summer flowers, and a cretia Mott or equal rights amend- | rainbow color scheme is to be used ment.” in appointments. Men “More Capable” Guests are to be Mesdames H. IL. Dr. Robert Hoppock, assistant TEE mer, Jy the director of the National Occupas , Dorothy | ors y ¥ tional Conference, came to the aid Tothy dldag, Dorothy Lawson, S > 4] Marjorie Lawson, Catherine Bow-

of housewives at the convention ; ; «Ne sher and Dr. Mary A ; when he said there is no sound rea- | ty ice Noh

son why women should cook the!

meals, wash the dishes, launder the | Dessert-Brid

clothes and clean the house. As a Qc Ja prer of fact, he said, the men ave | y etter fitted for it. | “Ocerde 1 Miss Bess Bloodworth, personnel | Pi oceeds to Go director of a large New York City | A Ch | EF department store held that maturs | 1 S ity is an aid to women over 40, in | 0 urc 1 und business. | S— a ” AS ay hog able | proceeds of the benefit dessert Toh one Ge ap a "20. ‘bridge in the home of Mrs. C. Dolly roared corneaipare With a 20-| Gray, 68 Westheld Bivd., sponsored year-old competitor,” she said, “but yo the Episcopal Church of the Ad she may have the mental capacity | vant Mothers: Guild, are to to to learn anything she needs to know the primary department 2 ust, as Well as the young competi | Mave than 19 tables are to be in or. | play, beginning at 1:30 p. m. SumWomen over 40 can earn a living | , ; successfully despite the bresent | oratiom oS ae Yo be Wied onder. demand for youth, Frances Maule, | mecery , author and women's occupational late vation: have ey en problem expert, asserted during a mush Thornburg PP Huston. radio symposium in connection with | yu. Tripp, C. A. Vogelsang, R. V. the convention. Sigler, Jean Patterson and W. B. Capitalize on Maturity, Advice Peterson, Miss Maule counseled Women | Wig George W. Pittman is gen“who must make a beginning after oy oan of the event, assisted 40” to endeavor to put their hob- land Mis So rson, guild president, bies and avocations on a practical | > Ne ittman. , basis rather than to attempt wa Nor } Yigahind ye the compete in the business world with | fa irri or ap i Te their younger sisters who have spe= | the prim ory ey soa ue cialized training. — up. Miss Maule cited seven principles | o i for the guidance of older women | W. > T L. President who unexpectedly find that they | must support themselves: Is to Make Report Seek to establish yourself In &| No ow Ackerman, prosident

Swishing, fringed leather riding skirts, furry | chaps and 10-gallon white felt hats belong only in rodeos, according 1. Opposition to “discriminations to Miss Mary Luten, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Luten, 3357 Ruckle St, who is an habitue of Mountain View Ranch in New Mexico. “Blue jeans are the order of the West,” she explained. e the train and don red flannel min»ing shirts and denim jeans for day-

p. m |?

business of your own instead of! hunting a Job which you may never | land. | Capitalize on your existing skills | rather than spending time and | money acquiring new ones. Steer away from the more crowded competitive fields. | Concentrate your efforts on the | so-called women's fields—food, shel- | ter. elothing, child care, ete. Concentrate on fields where ma- | turity is an asset rather than a liability. | Adjust Yourself to Business

Face your situation realistically. Accept the business world on its, own terms. Don’t expect it to ad- | just itself to your demands. Tt won't, Capitalize on your maturity rath er than attempt to camouflage it. | Other speakers who participated | in the symposium, broadcast over the Columbia network, were Dr. | Hoppock, Tona Robertson Logie, vo- | cational counselor and instructor of the Hunter College High School; Mrs. Grace Loucks Elliott, author | and lecturer, and Miss Bloodworth.

Margaret Thackley |

i

Honored at Dinner

Miss Margaret Thackley was honor guest at a dinner recently at the ! home of Mrs, O. M. Richardson, | 2230 N. Illinois St. | Miss Thackley is to leave this week for permanent residence in Los Angeles, Cal. Other guests were | Miss Virginia Wolf and Miss Helen | Ault, |

Marriage Announced | Mrs. A. H. Steinbrecher, 2625 N.| Meridian St, announces the mar riage of her daughter, Mrs. Elsa | Steinbrecher Brant, to Chauncey | Hart Eno IT, son of Mrs. Jonathan | E. Eno, Simsbury, Conn. The an- | nouncement was made at a recent garden party for intimate friends of Mrs. Eno. Initiation Planned Degree of Honor, Protective Asso | ciation, is to hold a class initiation | sand social hour tomorrow at 10th | and Rural Sts. The escort staff is co of Mesdames Eva Storer,

and Helen Dugan,

i | | {

uby Fowler, Olive Coons

of the Marion County W,. C. T. U., is {0 report on the recent W, C. 1. U. convention at a meeting of the Mary E. Balch unit Friday after. noon at the home of Mrs. C. W. Eltzroth,

Mrs. Elbert Moore, president, Is |

to preside. Mrs. A. Arnold is to read the devotions and Mrs. C. H. Bush will talk on the religious, patriotic and temperance activities of Mary H. Hunt,

Mind Your Manners

Test your knowledge of correct social usage by answers ing the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers below: 1. Does good taste today dis approve of tinted paper for ine formal letters? 2. For semibusiness stations ery, should a married woman have her name stamped “‘Helen Crane Davis” or “Mrs. John Davis.” 3. How might this same married woman have her per sonal stationery stamped . 4. May other than white or ivory paper be used for formal notes? 5. What colors of paper are In good taste for a man's per. sonal use?

What would you do if You were dating a personal letter? Write— (A) 75-37? (B) July 5, 1937? (C) July §?

s » » Answers

1. No, provided the shades are not garish. 2. Mrs. John Davis, 3. With her monogram, or her street address. 4. No. 5. White or gray.

Best “What Would You Do?" solution — (C) is all that is necessary

%

when dude ranchers decked them-

“We check

in-day-out wear.” Miss Luten, who is getting ready for her ahnual August ranch trip, is thrilled over her new high-heeled cowboy boots, the only departure from “farm clothes” which she has | purchased in anticipation of this year's trip. Bundles of sweaters and wool skirts, old tennis shoes for loafing, goggles, warm flannel pajamas, 1 are an important part of the ( paraphernalia which should go with |a rancher, we learned. | A one-way road, with a 500-foot | |drop on each side, leads to the | ‘ranch , , . so that even a trip to | the nearby village of Terrero for |a chocolate soda becomes a hazar- | |dous task, Miss Luten said. Oec- | casionally however, the ranchers {take treks to Santa Fe, which lies | 40 miles away, and everyone comes | home laden with colorful Indian jewelry. Riding Main Sport

| Riding is the principal sport at | a ranch, but one doesn't need to be an expert horseman to handle the gentle cow ponies which are pro- | vided at this spot, high on an 8200foot hill. At night a touch of local | color is usually supplied by the Mexicans who sit about the ecab- |

ins strumming their guitars, Miss | Luten said. After Labor Day when most of | | the 40 or so guests have gone back to their homes, ranch life goes more informal than ever. Miss | Luten often goes out into the fields [and mows hay with the cow-=hands, [eats in the kitchen with the cow{boys and smacks her lips over the [red hot Mexican concoctions which are served in great wooden bowls. | Miss Luten plans to stay on at | Mountain View until the latter part | of September. Her mother fis spending the summer in Santa Monica, Cal, with her son, Gran. ville Luten.

|

|

Fall Vegetables May Be Planted

———

It is not too late to start a supply of winter vegetables and to sow others for fall use. Don’t be misled into supposing that late varieties are indispensable because they are for late use. Early varieties are an advantage in many localities as they mature before frost. Late cabbage, cauliflower, kale, brussels sprouts and celery should | be set into permanent quarters now.

[The early maturing varieties of | beets such as Detroit dark red, | Crosby Egyptian and crimson globe |

should be sown now. | Carrots for the winter crop should 'also be sown. Sowings made up to the last week in July will yield the bulk of the crop before being | hipped. Sow radishes for succession, | White Strasburg and black Span(ish are good for winter use. | Thin crops of large growing | fruits, especially apples and pears. | If the crop is especially heavy, reduce clusters to a single fruit. In the case of apples it is preferable to let single fruits hang 10 to 12 inches apart. Flower Suggestions

In the flower border clean out bienial campanulas, foxgloves and other plants of this nature. Fox. gloves seedlings will spring up and may be kept for flowering next year, Pinch back geraniums to get

' today through

west

Lg LEE 0 A ¥

Times Photo.

Miss Mary Luten is preparing for her annual ranch trip. &

Hilton U. Brown Legion Auxiliary Elects Officers

Mrs. Lester Burgess was elected president of the Hilton U. Brown Jr. American Legion Auxiliary at a recent meeting in the home of Mrs. Oscar Stumpf, Other officers elected were: Mrs, Ruth Bess, first vice president; Mrs. Stumpf, second vice president; Mrs. A. J. Nisely, secretary; Miss Margaret Higgins, treasurer; Miss Velma Rike; chaplain; Miss Vivian Melntyre, sergeant-at-arms ahd Mrs. Ray E. Harris, historian. The executive committee is to be composed of Mesdames Harry Teitel, Joseph Stocker and Carl Herther. Delegates named to attend the state convention at Terre Haute were Mesdames Teitel and Stumpf, with Mesdames Burgess and Rike as alternates.

Personals

Miss Anne Ayres has just returned from a visit at Les Cheneaux Islands. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Ayres have taken a cottage there and are to go orth in August. My, and Mrs. Lyman Ayres and daughter, Miss Elsie Ayres, are to join them,

A number of local horsefolk are to attend the Lexington (Ky.) Junior League Horse Show at the famous trotting track in that eity Saturday. Among those expected at the ringside are Mrs. Clayton O. Mogg and daughs ter, Dorothy, Mr, and Mrs. Morris

| Roesener, Miss Janet Rosenthal and

R. H. Brown, Miss Ruth Stone is traveling in

| England. From there she expects |

to go to Ireland and will spend several weeks in Paris, France. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin K. Sheppard and daughters, Dorothy and Martha, and son, Edwin, recently returned from a three weeks’ vaca tion at Lake Wawasee. Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Franklin, Tulsa, Okla., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sheppard. Miss Geraldine Kindig, 428 E.

21st St, has returned from a trip |

to Virginia Beach, Va, New York and Eastern points,

Emery Sharp, 6501 Broadway, Is spending this week in New York. Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Ensminger, 3201 N. Meridian St, are vacationing at Elkhart Lake, Wis, as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rappaport. Mrs. Clarence F. Merrell is spending the summer at her cottage in Bay View, Mich, Mrs. Mary M. Cherdron has left for White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.. for the remainder of the summer, Mr. and Mrs, William H. Wemmer and their daughters, Gretchen, Barbara and Hildegarde Wemmer, 5260 N. Meridian St, are vacationing at Spring Lake, N. J. Mrs. Cora Jungelaus, Miss Hane nah Peterson and Miss Katherine Smith are on a trip to Quebec, Toronto and the East Coast,

50 Attend Birthday

Dinner for Woman, 71

Mrs. James J. Dowden, Scotland, Ind, was surprised on her Tist birthday recently with a basket dinner in the home of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Dowden. | More than 50 relafives and friends | were present. Those from Indian. | apolis were Messrs, and Mesdames | S. J. Rennard, Elmer Dowden, Ralph Dowden, Ray Wenz, Merrill Johnson, Phil Rech and Mesdames Algae Campbell, Eva Johnson, Ruth Weng, Eppie Rennard, Misses Angeline Janitz, Norma Jean Reasoner and Caleb Johnson and Charles Goodwin,

New...a Cream Deodorant |

bushy plants, Remove terminal growths with forefinger and thumb. It is a good thing to water freely during dry spelis. Remember that one good soaking once a week is more beneficial than a slight sprin. kling every evening. Anether thing be sure to put the water where it belongs—on the ground! Most plants resent being “treated” to cold douches during hot weather, This applies particularly to beans, peppers, tomatoes, eggplants and other warmth-loving vegetables,

HOT ? TIRED)

JI a \! er TY a } \

« ({ B® $ A a Wy oa. ) \ NREL SR, WET.

which safely Stops Perspiration

| |

1. Cannot rot dresses «= cannot irritate skin. No waiting to dry. 3. Can be used after shaving. 4. Instantly stops perspiras tion 1 to 3 days—removes odor from perspiration. A pure, white, selesy,

s stainless AAR

_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

| Neighbors

PAGE 11

| ‘Oil’ Creates

{| Furor-Near

Scholl Home

Drill, Each Finds Product Other Is Seeking.

By MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS

Excitement runs high in the neighborhood of the Logan Scholl country home at Fishers. When neighbors gather about a corner of the Forest McKinstrey

farm, which lies next door to the Scholl estate, their conversation has all the earmarks of one that might take place in the oil fields of Oklahoma. “How many feet to: the lower strata?” , . . “Any sight of bubbles today?” , . . are typical of the ques= tions asked. The hub-bub is being caused by a “hoped-for” oil well which T. Loren Driscoll is having drilled on the MecKinstrey farm. It all came about two years ago when the Logan Scholls wanted

Knowing that somewhere

1912 and the well abandoned be= cause of the low market price, Mr. Scholl ordered a well drilled in the front terrace. By some strange. quirk of nature no gas was forthcoming but oil gurgled from beneath the lower strata of rock. Plugged Well Since an oil well in the front yard was far from the thoughts or desires of Mr. and Mrs, Scholl they had it plugged and abandoned the idea of natural gas. Recently the search for oil, so abundant on the Scholl estate, was started on nearby land. For weeks the drillers have been at work but to their chagrin they have struck only gas in the Trenton rock gas belt, which lies about 930 feet below the earth’s surface. “If we could exchange commodi= ties,” Mr. Driscoll, who wants ofl, says to Mr. Scholl, who was bidding high for natural gas, “then we would each have something to our liking.” As it Is, the oil drillers keep digging, Mr. Driscoll keeps hoping and the gas keeps gurgling up where oil should be. =» » ”

Miss Dorothy Brooks. daughter [of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Brooks, is | to be hostess today at an informal | luncheon in honor of her cousin, | Miss Florence Bennett Wiggan. Nfiss | Wiggan is here from Litchfield, Conn, and is staying at the Brooks’ home, 202 E. 15th St. She is a junior at Bryn Mawr College and is visiting Indiana for the first time. Trips to Madison and Brown County, tennis and swimming at the country clubs have been her prin cipal diversion since she arrived last week,

» » »

Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin and daughter Laurd are to leave Fri day for Estes Park, Colo. They will be joined next week by Mr. Sheerin and another daughter, | Mary Jane, and will all remain at | Estes Park for a month's vacation.

{ ————————

St. Joseph’s Club To Give Dance

More than 175 couples are expected to attend the St. Joseph Men's Club dance to be held at 9 p.m. Friday in 8t, Joseph's Hall, 617 BE. North St. Decorations are to be in green and (lavender. Music is to be provided by the Imperial Ace Orchestra. | The committee in charge is com= posed of Donald Cochran, Joseph English, Maurice Rosa, Vincent Fox and Thomas Tiemeir. Miss Dorothy Jackson, daughter of Mrs. Andrew Jackson, 3507 N. Pennsylvania St, has left for Beverly Hills, Cal, where she is to be the guest of her uncle, Emil Seidel, well-known radio pianist.

natural gas for use in their home, | in that |; vicinity oil had been found back in|

[ use,

ness and Professional Women's

Mrs. Emma Houze,

Left to right in the Municipal Convention Hall at Atlantic City, N. J, as the annual convention of the National Federation of BusiClubs started Monday are Florence Honley, registrar; Anna A. Samuelson, Manhattan, Garnett, Kas, and Edith Barton, also of Gurnett.

Times-Acme Photo, :

Kas, vice president;

hostess.

St. Card party.

Garrett, 1720 Woodlawn Ave:

EVENTS

CLUBS Evadne Club. Tonight. Mrs. Norman Kleifgen, 1615 B. Mich. 8st,

Amateur Movie Club. 8:30 p. m. Thurs. Cropsey Auditorium, Library. James Genders, illustrated lecture. Regular meeting.

CARD PARTIES

Women of the Moose, Chapter 11. 2 p. m. Thurs. Moose Temple, 135 N. Delaware. Mrs. June Spears, hostess. Bridge, euchre. Holy Angels July Circle. 2 p. m. Thurs. School Hall, 28th St. and Northwestern Ave. Mrs. Dee Barnes, chairman. Card party. A. D. Streight Circle, Ladies of G. A. R. 2 p. m. Thurs. 512 N. Illinois

SORORITIES

Verae Sorores Chapter, Verus Cordis. 8 p. m. Thurs. Miss Ruth Warriner, 836 N. Emerson. Business meeting, Theta Sigma Chi. 8 p. m. Wed. Mrs. Herbert Massie, 902 E. 52d St. Alpha, Omega Kappa. 8 p. m. Wed. Misses Rosalyn and Jeanette

and to our sex.

chance which she had no business are more true than untrue.

by sex jealousy, conscious or uns conscious, Yet I have observed that American men, as a sex, have been more generous than grudging in their appraisal of women who have competed with them for honors. So I cannot but think that if Amelia Earhart had Yeen as careful and unimpeachable an aviator as Charles Lindbergh, she would have been given all due credit, The ignorant layman can hardly judge these technical matters, and yet one is given sober pause by the terse report of the captain of the Itasca, the Coast Guard cutter detailed to guide Miss Earhart and her navigator to Howland Island, that speck in the Pacific on which no aviator had ever before attemped to land. On June 28 the Itasca attempted to communicate with Miss Earhart on its 500 kilocycle frequency band and instructed her to come in on it. “She neither acknowledged nor came in on it,” the report said. The reason why she could not establish communication with the Itasca, according to ©. B. Allen, aviation editor of the New York Herald Tribune, was that her radio set was not equipped with the one | radio frequency range that ships And the reason she had scuttled the 500-kilocycle equipment was, in her own words, as quoted by Mr. Allen, that “neither Fred | nor I could use the key” «i. e., the | Morse code), |

Failure Inexplicable

This seems to me astounding, and I cannot understand why she did

| _.. For a Short Time Only!

savings py these

perfect fitting, Many Choice

a few were $3.95 many were $6.00 Nearly every size and width but aot in every

Ny

Styles Now On Sale!

means extra value, nationally famous, quality shoes for women.

Two Greater Value Groups

Optimism May Have Led Amelia To Discard Radio Equipment

By DOROTHY DUNBAR BROMLEY Times Special Writer It is not likely that we shall see Amelia Earhart—always so buoyant, likable and pleasing a personality-—pictured again in the news-

papers except by way of an obituary. because I believe that she made an intangible contribution to our times

¢

This is a saddening thought,

Many people now are saying that she was only a stunt exhibitionist, that she did nothing for the science of aviation and that she took a | sake and if she allowed her flights

to take. These accusations, I fear,

Some of the charges against her have been brought by men aviators and experts who might have been actuated | flights than for fortune and fame,

| not learn the code before starting out on her world-girdling flight. Perhaps she failed to take the one precaution which might have saved her and her navigator's life, because she had an optimistic temperament and could no more imagine sudden disaster and death than her newspaper readers could imagine such an end for her. It is easy lo say, in the light of subsequent events, that she had no right to take the slightest unnecessary chance when she must have known that the Navy would spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in fuel and risk the lives of United States aviators in its futile attempt to save her and her navigator. But

Garden Club Meeting in City 7 Church

State Federation Officials Entertained at Breakfast.

Mrs. Merritt E. Woolf presided at the afternoon sessions of the Indianapolis District, Indiana Fed eration of Garden Clubs conference today in North Methodist Church.

Misses Anna and Luzena Hosea, 5855 Central Ave. entertained state federation officials attending the meeting with a 7 a. m. porch breaks fast this morning. Guests were Mrs. Harper Hale Muff, Richmond, former federation president, and Mrs. E. C. Cline, state roadside development come mittee chairman. Decorations and appointments were in pink and white, Phlox and bergamots centered the table.

Met This Morning

State board members met at 10 a. m. in the home of the president, Mrs, Walter P. Morton, 3434 E. Fall Creek Blvd. to discuss problems and plans for the coming year. Table decorations at the 1 o'clock luncheon represented work of various clubs. The Junior Garden Club table was decorated by the Marigold Club; Roadside Develop= ment Committee table by the Wome an’s Department Club; Horticulture Committee table, Neophyte Club; Garden Centers Committee, by the Spade and Trowel Club; State Board table, by the Indianapolis Club; President's table by the Ire vington Club and the Men's Gare den Club table by the Arbutus Club,

Officer to Be Guest

Miss Marcella Hays, Muncie, national Junior Garden Club chaire man, was a guest. Indianapolis district clubs include Anderson Garden Club, Darlington Garden Club, Fortville Garden Club and the Greenfield Garden Club, Indianapolis clubs participating were the Arbutus, Christamore, Forest Hills, Indianapolis, Irvington, Marigold, Neophyte, North End, Men's Garden Club, Spade and Trowel, Emerson Grove and the Garden section of the woman's Department Club,

to last in adventure for adventure's

to be commercialized it was, I suse pect, more for the sake of the

Try to imagine, if you can, any woman winging off over the ocean alone—as she did twice--for the sake of commercial rewards. Somes thing greater than the hope of gain drove her on, With finis written over the Pacific I could wish that she had used sounder judgment, for her own sake and for the sake of our sex's repu= tation, in a field where she was a challenger for high honors, But I don’t forget that more than a few highly thought of men aviators have missed their mark and disappeared forever, nor that she had an able man with her aiding and advising her. Neither can I forget that Miss Earhart had some ‘amazing solo flights to her credit,

I cannot believe—as I study Miss Earhart's face and recall the friendly stories I have heard of her -that she ever envisioned for a minute the search was made. It would not have been like her gracious self to ask for any great outlay of the taxpayers’ money or any risking of navy men’s lives.

She showed a brand of courage when she started off over the Ate lantic alone in her cockpit, and again on her flight from Hawaii ta California—which fired the imaginations of all of us. Because she had great courage I am glad and proud that she lived and had her day, and I grieve that it is over

Miss Earhart believed from first

—————— A ———— ———

80 soon.

I used to tremble and turn pale

Can YOU sil, ui atthe deal?

Whene’er I climbed upon a scale . . But now! I keep my curves in place— I took the “milky mode” to grace!

is for sensible dendexizing

ase MILK