Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1938 — Page 6

PiCE C . Tarkingtons Still Find Friendship and Charm In Old Kennebunkport

Author's Home, Seawood, Is Mecca for Many Notables; Village Preserves Quaint and Provincial Touch of Pioneer Days.

Thirty years ago, Booth Tarkington, convalescing from typhoid fever, was commanded by his doctor to “go to the healthiest place in the world and eat plenty of seafood.” Mr. Tarkington inquired where that Utopia might be, thinking of some remote corner of the world, and the reply came—*‘‘Kennebunkport, Me.” That was the beginning of an acquaintance with the picturesque, seafaring village that has lasted and deep-

ened with the years. i Kennebunkport, at the mouth of the Kennebunk River, was settled late in the 17th Century. The original white settlers were a

massacre which took place on the very ground where Seawood, their home, now stands. ' The owner of a cabin, whose name is lost in the annals of unrecorded tragedy, sensed the presence of Indians in the locality, and with that second-sight of the pioneer went to the village for aid. He returned to find that his wife and child had been scalped. | The glorious days of the village were during the clipper ship era when Kennebunkport was one of the major ship building centers in the country. Those men knew their waters, their land and their vessels. It is a knowledge that has outlived the change and quickening tempo of a century. The Tarkington home, Seawood, was built in 1917. Since then the Tarkingtons have owned three boats: The Zan, The Zantu and The Zantre. Not counting the celebrated Regina, a two-masted schooner of ancient vintage now cradled alongside the boathouse and the scene of many parties. Although The Regina may never set sail again as in the days of its youth it has had a long life and a merry one; perhaps it is best that now it is simply a place for people to meet and talk. The “Zan” boats were named after Mrs. Tarkington whose first name is Susannah—Zan for short to her husband. Hence Zans one, two and three. The present one was built at Kennebunkport and is a fair sized motor boat.

Home Has Lured Many Notable Visitors

Actors, writers, producers, managers and internationally famed wits have absorbed the old world atmosphere of this little town. Alexander Woollcott has been a frequent visitor; Helen Hayes, Otis Skinner, Leo ‘Garrillo, Maude Adams, Biliie Burke, Ruth Gordon, McKay Morris and countless other theatrical luminaries have visited at Seawood. / Their closést neighbors are Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Roberts. Mr. Roberts’ most recent novel was that best-selier “Northwest Passage.” Hugh Kahler, of Saturday Evening Post fame, has had a house there until the past several years. But undoubtedly more picturesque than the Big Names are the simple lives and customs of a long vanished age that still are found in the village. To quote Mrs. Tarkington: “The village life begins when the summer residents go home.” Although they call Indianapolis their home, for eight months of the year Mr. and Mrs. Tarkington are at Kennebunkport. A recent addition to Seawood is Mr. Tarkington's workroom at the back of the house. - It was constructed completely of field stones from the woods behind the house, Jacobean in style, and with walls made from old oak from an English hunting lodge. There Mr. Tarkington could write undisturbed even though the end of the world were to come,

Finger of Modernity Touches Scene

Mr. and Mrs. Tarkington own the boathouse with Mrs. William Trotter of Philadelphia, and life centers there with Sunday night suppers every week and daily tea. : Mrs. Tarkington deplores the fact that filling stations are taking the place of the lovely old elms and that the serene little streets -are being filled with large and blatant advertisements. Especially endearing is the ancient drugstore advertised as the spot “where friend meets friend,” and the new Library which is the pride and joy of every stout Kennebunkport heart. emi-annually, when the Tarkingtons make their trips to and “from. the East, they are accompanied by three very necessaty adjuncts. Two enchanting taffy-colored cocker spaniels and a French poodle. The aforementioned, Sir Peter Lely and Sir Joshua Reynolds, form an odd contrast to the beautiful Figaro, beloved of Mr. Woollcott. Mr. Tarkington’s passion for French poodles is almost as celebrated as his incorrigible and unforgettable “Penrod.” There have been Gamin, the first, next Wops, and now the impertinent Figaro in the Tarkington menage. It was during the war that Mr. Woollcott happened to be reading “Gentle Julia” and was so intrigued with Mr. Tarkington’s description of “the most amusing dog in the world” that it has become a lifelong obsession. 8 # »

Miss Janet Noyes and Frederic M. Ayres Jr., whose engagement was announced at the holiday season, are to be honored guests Saturday night at a dinner given by Miss Irving Moxley at her home, ~ 1126 N. Meridian St. . Miss Noyes and her mother, Mrs. Nicholas H. Noyes, who returned recently from Florida and who are now in New York, will . arrive home Saturday moning. |

¥ # #

Federation Board Approves

~~ Uniformity in Marriage Laws

Resolutions of national and state significance were approved today by the Indiana Federation of Clubs board at a ‘meeting at the Claypool

Hotel.

Resolutions will be submitted for ratification at the State Federation

convention May 24-26 at the Claypool Hotel.

constant prey to Indians, and Mrs. Tarkington tells a grim story of a.

Hoosier Salon Open to Nuns as Special Guests

Indianapolis ‘Catholic schools were special guests this afternoon at the second annual Indianapolis

Hoosier Salon bemg presented in Block’s. sixth floor auditorium by the Woman's Department Club art department. Schools represepted included Marion College,) Holy Rosary, Holy Name, Holy Trinity, St. Francis de Sales, Our Lady of Lourdes and Little Flower Schools and St. John’s, St. Agnes and St. Mary Academies. Acting as hostesses in addition to department club hostesses for the day were Mesdames George Spencer, Earl Seltman and David Swain; Miss

O’Brien.

itors this year. St. Mary’s College, Holy Cross, is showing the painting, “The Yellow Lily”; Sister Marie Rosaire of the same school is showing “The Fourth Station,” and Sister Rufinia, Lafayette, winner of the Peter C. Reilly prize awarded to the best work in any medium submitted by an instructor in a ‘Catholic university, college or high school, is exhibiting “The Dressed-Up Canadian.” Another painting of unusual interest to nuns is a painting by Adolph Robert Shulz, “In the Violet Flame.” These pictures are a part of the 125 painting exhibit which will be open to the public without charge from 9:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. through Friday, April 15.

~ Personals |

Miss Frances Block, Miami Beach, Fla., arrived yesterday to visit her brother, H. C. Block Jr. 1918 N. Delaware St. Accompanying her

1 was Miss Julie Baker, daughter of

Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus R. Baker, 3104 N. Pennsylvania St., who returned to Indianapolis after several weeks’ visit in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wuensch, 4022 N. Illinois St., have arrived home after spending the winter in Tampa, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Howard are in Washington following a short stay at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York. They will return to Indianapolis soon. Mrs. J. K. Leasure and her

. The Board moved to support prin-

ciples of uniform regulation of marriage and divorce laws throughout the United States, and indorsed the principle of Hull Reciprocal

Trade Treaties. The board moved to ask revision’ or repeal of existing tax laws to the end that taxes be reduced, business be allowed to make normal recovery and the evils of unemployment be abated. : Extension of facilities which would attack and conquer the syphilis plague was recommended. The board also reaffirmed support of uniform state narcotic laws and recommended that states without such’ acts should secure necessary legislation to control marihuana traffic. ;

FTC Wins Commendation

The was commended for its protection of consumers.

‘every teachers’ training course in

Indiana was advocated. The board | | also approved the resolution that |!

the Indiana, Federation of Clubs through legislation and other re-

sources at their disposal provide a | |

substitute for war. The General Federation’s recommendation that state federations instigate an immedite study of tax revision followed by informed action, was approved. The board moved to .renew support of maintenance of high standards for national parks. Mrs. Oran E. Ross, Winchester, is resolutions committee chairman. “Womanhood on the March” will be the theme of the annual state convention May 24-26 at the Claypool Hotel, Mrs. Edwin I. Poston, Martinsville, state president, said today. . Action was taken last night at an executive board meeting in the * Claypool. ‘Dr. H. H. Whitehouse, dean of Albion College, Albion, Mich.; Mrs. Earl Padgett, Galion, O., Ohio Federation of Clubs president; Miss Abby Bellport, LaCrosse, Kas., president and director of the Kansas Federation and president of the . Upper . Mississippi Valley Federation, and Mrs. H. H. Muchall, St. Louis, Missouri Federation president, will speak at a formal opening dinner Tuesday night, May 24.

Federal Trade Commission ||

Compulsory char-|| acter education to be included in ||

Mrs. C, Warner Williams, Chi-

cago, will be speaker at the dinner meeting Wednesday right, May 25, which will b& Fine Arts night. Mrs. Frederick G. Balz, Indiana General Federation director, will show motion pictures of the old Fauntleroy home in New Harmony. : Rep. Samuel Pettingill, South Bend, will be a speaker at the annual federation dinner Thursday night, May 26. “Permanent Assets” will be discussed by Mrs. J. L. Blair Buck, Richmond, Va., general fed-

eration budget chairman.

daughter Miss Jane, 5831 Washington Blvd. are in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. Morris, 240 Hampton Drive, are among recent arrivals as the WaldorfAstoria, New York.

Auxiliary to Meet Mrs. Fern Lent is chairman of .a luncheon to be heid tomorrow noon by members of Englewood Auxiliary, O. E. S., at the Masonic Hall, 2714 E. Washington St. Mrs. Hazel Pavey is to preside at the 2 p. m. business meeting.

A May 14 wedding is to be that of Miss Marie Nies, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Nies to P. E, Rinderknecht, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Rinderknecht.

Nuns from Oldenburg and all

Frances Carter and Miss Alice

Several nuns are among exhib--Sister Lamreen of

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Dexheimer-Carlon Photo,

has been announced. The wedding is to be May 29.

~

. Voorhis Photo. Mrs. Fred Black announces the engagement of her daughter, Cornelia, to F. F. Blomeyer, son of Mrs. Fred G. Blomeyer. The wed-

ding is to be in May. -

be Hirshburg Photo. The engagement of Miss Essie Alice Scott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Scott, to B. Allan Sutton, Chicago,

Philip Lutz Jr., Saturday at F. M. Hudelson, Rushville.

on — . TUESD

Recent Brides and Brides-to-Be of Spring Season

Kindred Photo. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Velona, 1225 E. Market St. have announced the engagement of their daughter, Alda, to Fred J. Ulses. The wedding date has not been set.

Miss Mary K. Hudelson became the bride of John P. Lutz, son of the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Mary Hudelson,| John Philip Lutz ‘Wed mn Rushville

Miss Mary Katherine Hudelson was married Saturday at the home| of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank

M. Hudelson, near Rushville, to John Philip Lutz. Mr. Lutz is a son of Philip Lutz Jr., Indianapolis, former Indiana Attorney General. . The Rev. Fredrick R. Daries, Zion ‘Evangelical Church pastor, read the double-ring ceremony. Mrs. Frank Weber, Carthage, was the bride's only attendant, and C. W. Titterington, Indianapolis, was best man. The couple left immediately after the ceremony for the South. They will live at 570 E. Fall Creek Blvd. | Mrs. Lutz attended Indiana University. 'Mr. Lutz was graduated

son, 726 N. Linwood, hostess. mage sale,

New York St., hostess.

hostess. L rty.

ington Blvd. hostess. : CLUBS

hostess.

War Memorial Bldg. Harold West quency.”

LODGE

Sewing Circle, Little Temple, Pythian Lela Day, 433 N. Bosart, hostess.

EVENTS

§ Alpha chapt., Alpha Chi. 8 p. m. today. Miss Genevieve Uhl, host=

ess. Beta chapt., Omega Phi Tau. 8 p. m. Wed. Miss Dorothea ThompPlans to be completed for rum-

Beta chapt., Phi Theta Delta. Tonight. Mrs. John Trout, 4922 E. Lambda Gamma. 8 p. m. today. Mrs. James Cahill, 223 W. 32d, bda chapt., Omega Phi Tau. Tonight. Russian Izba. Rush Sigma Sigma Kappa. Wed. night. Miss Hazel Hensen, 3906 Wash-

S. S. 7:30 p. m. today. Miss Louise Mason, 6190 Washington Blvd, 12th District American Legion aux. council. 1 0. m. Wed. World

Mrs. Helen Clarridge, president.

Zonta to Scan Plans to Honor Amelia Earhart

A proposed Amelia Earhart memorial will be discussed at the Zonta Club of Indianapolis dinner meeting at 6:30 tonight at the O’Hara Tearoom. Miss May Shields is club president. :

Miss Anna Carpenter, delegate to the spring conference held March 26 and 27 at the Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago, will lead the discussion. - \ > Miss Earhart was affiliated with the New York Zonta Club. Suggestion to establish a memorial was made by the clubs of Zonta International District 7. The recommendation was accepted by the international board and is being presented to the entire membership.

to discuss “Juvenile Delin-

Sisters. Thurs. noon, Mrs.

Y, APRIL 5, 1938

Mary Gilso

|Will Speak

ToAAUW.

Husbands of Members Invited to Dinner : On April 12.

- Miss Mary B. Gilson of the University of Chicago department of economics will be the speaker at the general meeting of the Indianapolis. branch, American Association of University Women, Tuesday, April 12. Husbands of members have been invited to attend the dinner at 6:15 p. m. and the program. Miss Gilson will speak on “Men, Women and Controversial Subjects.” Reserva=

| tions ‘for the event ‘are to be made

with Mrs. William H. Ruten. Outstanding on the May calendar will be a dinner honoring Dr. Margaret S. Morriss, tional A. A, U. W. president, at-6:30 p. m. May 4

sat the Indianapolis Athletic Club,

Sectional Parley May 6

Also on the May calendar is the sectional A. A. U. W. conference to be held May 6-7 at Palmer House, Chicago. Information may be ob tained from Mrs. Robert M. Lingle, president-elect. | The board of directors will meet at 1:30 p. m. April 19. Included in the events this month will be the meeting of the Consumers’ Research group at 2 p. m. Monday, April 18, at the home of Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, 31 E. 45th St. : Mrs. Claude Potts will talk on “The Shrimp Canning Industry,” and John H. Balch, Co-operative Services educational director, will discuss “Co-operatives.” “Plotting the Story” will be discussed by Dr, Allegra Stewart, Crea= tive Writing group instructor, at a meeting at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, April 7. Stories, poems and articles written by class members will be read and criticized. On Thursday, April 21, Dr. Stewart will talk on “Dialog.” The May 5 meeting will be held at the Rauh Memorial Library. Dr. Stewart will discuss “The Marketing of Fiction.”

Books to Be Reviewed

Two books are to be reviewed at the Evening Contemporary Literature group meeting at 7:30 p. m, today. Mrs. Edgar Baum will review Lin Yutang's “Importance of Living,” and Miss Jeanne McWorkman will discuss Sinclair Lewis’ “Prodigal Parents.” Richard Helms of The Indianapeolis Times advertising staff and who served with the United Press in Europe, will talk on the present European situation at the dinnermeeting of the Evening Discussion group Tuesday, April 26, at the Business and Professional Women's Clubhouse. Effects of recent European developments on American foreign policy will be the topic for general ‘discussion at the International Relations group meeting at 1:45 p. m, Tuesday, April 26. Books to be re-

from Indiana University School of Business Administration and at present is a student at Indiana Law School.

Will Discuss ‘Isms’ Mrs. Bjorn Winger is to discuss “Communism and Fascism: What Are They?” at a meeting of Alpha Chapter, Alpha Delta Omega Sorority, at 7 p. m. today at the Hotel Washington. Mrs. Barbara Kassenbrock will conduct a discussion of current events.. .

Perennials Brighten S firid Borders

eon

ite:

25 feet

«=f feetde5 féet»

(Tenth in a Series)

By DONALD GRAY

Times Special Writer

ERENNIAL flowers can be grown along shrub borders so that there is continuous color and picking of flowers all summer long.

space need be only a few

should be along the edge of the shrubs where the

sun strikes it at least half the day.

Prepare the ground with at least 12 to 15 inches deep of good topsoil and be prepared to replenish the

plant food every year. The roots

will soon grow into this area, so the be prepared each year by cutting off shrub roots and

adding plant food.

Here is a suggested planting scheme which will

giving blooming plant from June to KEY NAME

. Boltonia latisquama .....Pin

. Rosa hugonis ............ Yellow

. Aster frikarti- . Gyposophila Bristol Fairy. White . Aconitum autumnale ....Blue

. Helianthus sparcifolius ...Yellow . Rudbeckia Newmanni ..,. Yellow .. Yellow le : te foliage ue

. Helenium Riverton G 9. Buddleia Fortune ..,..... 10. Artemisia Silver King..... 11. Aster Blue Gem

COLOR k

Informal Border 14. 15. . Iris Ultra

feet wide, but it

frandiflora from the shrubs und must

October:

35. Sedum acre

¥

. Iris Kaempferi Dream Iris Kaempferi Matchless. Blue and white Remerocallis J. A. Crawford ...

. Iris Midnight ... Iris Jeanne D’Arc ........ White . Iris Crusader . Anchusa Dropmore .....Blue . Doronicum caucasicum .. Yellow Funkia sub-cordata

.... White Lupinus Russell Hybrids... Mixed . Lupinus polyphyllus f

roseus is . Spiraea astilbe Prof. V. . Weil

. Spiraea astilbe Vesta.....Rose ‘White carnations White . Campanula rotundifolia. ,.Blue . Heuchera brizoides ......Red . Iris tectorum ..... . Linum alpinum’ ......... Blue ‘33. Phlox subulata fairy...... Blue 34. Phlox subulata vivid 35 Phlox subulata alba ...... White

25 feet

© 2.3 ft. 2.3 ft.

... White

3 ft. 2 ft. 2 ft. 21t.. > aft 4-5 ft. 18in.

. Apricot yellow . Purple «cesses. Deep Purple

«sess. Lavender

18in. 3-5 ft.

2 ft. an.

-18in. an 18in. 12in, ‘18in. 12in.

sesso .

es assess White -

seco «Yellow

ss ssasss ss. BRIE

sees Pink’

ssvisssnsenass YEIIOW

. 37. Bedum glaucum .........Blue-Green 33. Hypericum moserianum... Yellow

CARD PARTIES

Women of the Moose. 2 p. m. Thurs. Temple, son, Moosehaven chairman, in charge. Fifth Sunday. 8 p. m. today. Indianapolis Power and Light Co.

Mrs. Clara Thomp-

Club

Outstanding on the mid-week Glee Club program at Caleb Mills Woodstock Club tomorrow night. The event is sponsored by

chestra is to provide music for the dance. Walter W. Kuhn Jr. and George Mahoney Jr., two vacationing Dartmouth students, will entertain’ students on vacations from other colleges at a dinner at Woodstock. Their guests will be Russell Ryan Jr. and John Rauch, Harvard; Ward Hackleman Jr, Wabash; Donald Test, Princeton; Jerome Noel, Cornell; Harley Rhodehamel Jr., Robert Brant and Sam Miller, Purdue. Mr. ‘and Mrs. Alexander Thomson’s dinner guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Pearson Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ogle. Emmy Haerle will entertain dinner guests at the home of her mother, Mrs. Elsa PF. Test. : Another party to attend the program and dance includes Mr. and Mrs. Edward Troy, Peru. Messrs. and Mesdames Marvin L. Lugar, John McConnell and Fred Albershardt. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Haerle will attend with Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams and Mr. and Mrs. James T. Cunningham. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Runnels Harrell and Mr. and Mrs, Harry V. Wade will go together. = # Mr. and Mrs. H. Foster Clippinger will be with Mr, and Mrs. William Morrison, and the Clippingers’ son, H. Poster Clippinger Jr, will go

Parties Arranged for Glee Program Tomorrow

/ (Another Story, Page 11)

nips

the’ Indianapolis Day Nursery Junior Auxiliary and the Dartmouth Alumni Association. . / Dartmouth’s Barbary Coast Or-&—

social calendar is the Dartmouth Hall and the dance to follow at

the Spink-Arms Hotel, .and Mr. Hiser will attend with Messrs. and Mesdames Joseph Hanna, Laurence Shappert, Richard T. Hill, Robert Stempfel, Frank Dowling, Hal Benham and George Hoster. Ushers at the program are to include Nancy Trimble, recently chosen Shortridge High School Bluebell, and other Shortridge students, Betty Freeman, Dorothy Beem, Sue Christena, Susanna Clark, Marian Wilcox, Nancy Heath, Mary Janet Mummert, Barbara Fuller, Phyllis Johnson, Sue Ann Knippenberg, Nancy Briggs, Joan Dougan, Lois Thomas, Joan Mick, Betty Lewis, Sylvia Pittman, Dorothy Baier, Martha Lou Sunderland and Charlotte Tindall.

DePauw Alumni Dine Tomorrow

The Indianapolis DePauw Alumni Associgtion is to hold a 6:30 p. m. centennial dinner tomorrow night at the Broadway Methodist Church. Fred Hoke is to preside. Miss Ruth Stone, arrangements chairman, is assisted by Mesdames John Burkhart, James C. Carter, P. Newton Cook, Orien W. Fifer Jr, Robert E. Allen and Misses Mary Ann Coffin and Ruth Starbuck. Tucker is centennial

Tall, . Mary Jo Spurrier, Jean |

Memorial in/Hawaii

Miss Earhart becdme a member of the Boston Zonta Club in 1928. Later when her work took her to New York, she accepted the invitation to become a member of the unit there. Zontians previously honored her by contributing to the construction o° a memorial celebrating her first flight from Hawaii to the mainland and by presenting her with a Zonta Trophy in recognition of her dis tinguished flying record. The Hawaiian memorial is at Honolulu on a point overlooking the ocean. The final form of the.memorial under discussion will be decided by a committee appointed by Mrs. Ellen M. Anderson-Parks, St. Paul, Minn., international president, and her board. The committee will be announced at the international convention June 30-July 2 in Banff, Canada. No contributions are to be accepted except from Zonta members and clubs.

Theta Alumnae Set Luncheon-Bridge

Mrs. Hiram Keehn, 3331 N. Meridian St., is to be hostess to Beta Alumnae Association, Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority, tomorrow. Bridge is to follow a covereddish luncheon. Hostesses will be Mesdames James Gloin, Earl Moomaw,- O. B. Norman, Elmer Sherwood, Taylor Groninger and J. Don Miller. :

viewed are “Europe in Arms,” Hart, and “Japan Defies the World,” Scherer. . ;

Mrs. Wright Hostess

Mrs. W. Donald Wright, 820 EB. 51st St., will be hostess for the Parental Education Study and Discussion group at 2 p. m. Friday, April 15. Discussion will be “Social Experiences at Nursery, Kindergarten and Primary School Ages.” “Unfinished topics will be discussed at the meeting Friday, May 20, at the home of Mrs. C. Norman Green, 2650 Sutherland Ave. On Friday, June 3, group member's children will be guests at a garden party at the home of Mrs. Leslie M. DeVoe, 7345 N. Meridian St.

P.- T.A. Notes

“Juvenile Court” will be the topie of Dr. F. S. C. Wicks in an address at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow at School 8. Music will be furnished by the Mothers’ Chorus of School 61. A social hour will follow. Fe #2 x = A health program has been are ranged for the 2 p. m. meeting tomorrow of the School 10 group. A social hour and tea will conclude the program. y 2 8 =

Grades 3 and 4 of School 12 will present a pioneer play, a Dutch dance and a skit, “My Country,” at the 3:15 p. m. meeting tomorrow of the school association.

® ” ”

The Rev. Henry Edwards Chace will give a short talk and will sing a vocal solo at the School 30 P-T. A. meeting at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow. The Indiana Oxygen Co. will give a demonstration on “Liquid Air.” »

” 2

School 20 will hold its regular meeting tomorrow at 3:15 p. m, Included on the program will be a safety program by pupils of Miss Hazel Sinclair, a talk on safety and piano numbers by pupils of Miss Norma Mueller. : 2 8 = The Warren Township Council of Parent-Teacher Associations will elect officers and hold a réeund-table discussion at the Warren Central

| High School at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow, #

D. T. Weir, assistant superintendent of schools, will speak at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow at School 33. A musical program will follow. » » » Patrons of School 46 will hear Mrs. Ruth F. Parker speak on “China” at a 2:30 p. m. meeting tomorrow. The Mothers’ Chorus will sing. :

Push-Up or Croquignole

RING: ENDS

$330 JF

{ SHAMPOO and SET . . 75¢ _ Machineless PERMANENTS

NTER

$5.00 to $10.00

BEAUTY SALON

RI. 5982