Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1941 — Page 26

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES | Portrait of a Busy Woman — Beth Schofield

FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941 Sends Greetings to C. A. R.

PAGE 24

Andre Maurois Will Address Contemporary Club Thursday

Welfare Club Plans Benefit Card Party

Nature Study Club To Meet Sunday

Plans for a benefit card party and Easter programs occupy the attention of local club members.

The WELFARE CLUB will meet Monday at the home of Mrs, Raleigh Fisher, 4625 N. Capitol Ave., to complete plans for the annual benefit card party Wednesday in Block's auditorium, Mrs. A. Frank Gleaves and Mrs. Olin Hatton Jr. will meet with committee groups following a luncheon. Luncheon chairman is Mrs. Thomas Hindman, assisted by Mesdames

THE APPEARANCE OF ANDRE MAUROIS, French man of letters and biographer, at the John Herron Art Institute next Thursday, has been arranged by the board of directors of the Contemporary Club. M. Maurois, now at Harvard University, will stop in Indianapolis to address the club on his way to the Pacific Coast, He served in the first World War and he was attached as an observer to Gen. Gort's headquarters at

the beginning of the present war. Among his 22 books are “Ariel: The Life of Shelley.” “Chateaubriand,” “Disraeli.” “Byron,” “Dickens,” "Prophets and Poets,” “Bernard Quesnav.” “Captains and Kings,” "The World of Illusion,” “Conversation,” “Voltaire” and “Fatapoufs and Thinifers.” This vear he has contributed to Collier's, Life and other magazines, Members of the Contemporary Club board arranging his appearance here are Samuel Runnels Harrell, president; Mrs. Carl F. Eveleigh, first vice president; Mrs. C. Otto Janus, second vice president; Mrs. John G. Rauch, third vice president; Francis W, Dunn, secretary; Irving M. Fauvre, treasurer, and directors James F. Carroll, D. Laurance Chambers, William R. Higgins, Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, Miss Elizabeth Ohr, Ferris T. Taylor, Alex Vonnegut, Carl J, Wilde and Russell Willson.

Charles Maxwell, Carlton Klaus, J. W. Dixon, R. L. Runnel and Hodge Worsham, Mrs. Joel Wilmoth, founder and honorary president; Mrs. Olin Hatton Sr., president, and Mrs. Fisher, president-elect, will be hostesses at the card party, assisted by Mesdames Ray Holcomb, Lawrence Cummins, Harry Dawson, Harold Dillon, John A. George Sr. Richard Poole, Robert M. Stokes, Harry Watson, Elmer Piel, Allen Thompson, Henry Dithmer, Blake

Stone, W. S. Jensen and Harry ' Kuhn. Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan is among those sending greetings te the state conference of the Children of the Revolution on May 17 in South Bend. He is shown with Mrs. W. R. Simpson, who is chairman of arrangements for the participation of the local group, committee will present Easter mu-

ign | Delta Zeta’s National President Civic Player Prepares 37th Role Hohenberger [rion Site n'dane a" To Speak at State Luncheon As She Holds Down the Job of To Speak Here chen Le marion comiv| April 26 at Columbia Club National Kappa President Frank M. Hohenberger, Nastrville| Sete. Boren. gi CHILDREN § Plans for State Day activities head the news of local soronty

- and specialis ral | SUNSHINE CLUB of SUNNYSIDE. | Broups today Tec i el ; of DELTA ZETA'S national president, Mrs. Hubert M. Lundy of

By LOUISE FLETCHER luncheon meeting of the Ladies of| “leeland and Greenland” will be | Bloomington, will be the principal speaker at the sorority's 25th state od rt ye , ‘ee 7 . rep . jz n ont “I GO TO MARKET for my Italians,” Beth Schofield confided as she the Scottish Rite Tuesday and will | described by Mrs. Walter Brewer | luncheon April 26 at the Columbia Club. Alumnae throughout the

, 8. FB 8 - | ic : 's fr Pauw and Indiana Universities and self to the to a trunk in the Civie Theater's rehearsal hall. show natural color slides of Brown| 2nd Mrs. Homer Higman to AN-|state and chapter members from De : [ned esp 8 fue top of Bogert, Shoal —was in the Elieases Fan Show DRI i ° GLO-INDIA CHAPTER members, | Franklin College will attend the luncheon and a reception and tea

| . : ; ! . “My: " , ol: plnaip . INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL-| dance to follow. 1 rehearsal for the next Civic production, “Mrs. Moonlight,” in which she| General chairman for the lunch-|"_, : S A [plays the Scotch housekeeper, Minnie. As usual she was doing two eon in the Scottish Rite Cathedral, Prony ohm, feeling tomorrow | Honor guests at the hinchson yu | things at once: listening for entrance cues with one ear and to questions the last of the current season, will | IF & 1 o0clock luncheon in the be Delta Zetas who attende €lare: |with the other eens - be Mrs. Birney Spradling. Mrs, | Sun Dial Tearoom. Mrs. L. D. Rags- first, i . ) S. . . S. | . evening have been made by Mrs. B. F. Terry, Winchester; Messrs. Her remark answered a query] Stanley G. Myers is chairman of the | 2l6 Jane Me Thomas McNerney : and Mesdames Titus, Hall and William E. Osborne; Dn and, Bs, labout the source of her characteri-| attendance committee, Cards in| Wil be hostesses. Alumnae Chapter, which sponsors R: Pajerson, Jupenton #na dance . A ' "BI . mse an : i ' turk { ha | ; . h & 4 ar silver - SC : ’ NY) M. Sidney J. Hatfield, William 3. Bra a Tg Scar- Zakions, noted among Civic theater- the social room will follow the pro LAMPAS GROUP of EPSILON | t3¢h Sta 8 a fo 2 Aver an” | schmidt, Elgin Rucker snd Miss mother, Mrs. Farl C. Townsend, ana Me: : ii |goers for their verisimilitude. Gifted am, SIGMA OMICRON will meet at 10 |DLVEISary ; ture will SKIS BY| Ruth Morgan, reservations; Miss borough BY NS. tion of officers will be held by with a photographic memory for a. m. Monday in the home of Mis, | Active chapters reminiscent of early’ Westcott, and Miss Jean Johnston,

Mayflower Descendants to Entertain Secretary

HAROLD G. MURRAY of New York, secretary general of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants will be the guest of the Indiana Society's board of assistants at a noon luncheon Monday in the Claypool Hotel. Mr. Murray is to be guest speaker Monday evening at the 25th anniversary dinner of the Indiana Society at the Propylaeum. Frederick VanSleet, Cleveland, governor of the Ohio Society of Mayflower Descendants, also will be a guest at the luncheon and the dinner. Members of the board of assistants attending the luncheon will be Mrs. Tilden F. Greer, governor: Joseph A, Minturn. Paul Buchanan, Mrs. Edmund Burke Ball of Muncie, Mesdames W. Mitchell Tavior, Sidney 1.. Scarborough and James G. Haston, Earl C. Townsend Jr. the Rev. George S. Southworth, Dr. Fletcher Hodges, Norman E. Titus, Ellis B. Hall, Mesdames Edna M. Barcus, A. M. Hetherington, S. E. Perkins, Jess Pritchett Jr., H, A. O. Speers and Charles Mr R. Weiss. : : ee Reservations for the dinner that

The Rev. Harry S. Campbell, assistant pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will give the address at the NATURE STUDY CLUB'S annual Easter program Sunday at [2:30 p. m. in Buzzards’ Roost Cab- { ins, Woollens’ Gardens. The music

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Children at the Marion County

Mesdames Robert DD, Armee

y i State Day held in 1913 and |g, ng George A. Buskirk and Roy

Murray § ‘esidents of the Indianapolis | Dash presi : g p E. Peterson, luncheon and dance;

vention, she was national director of provinces, and for 10 years before that she was chairman of chapter finances. In addition, she was the &F : first president of Delta province! the Indiana which includes all chapters in In-| Travel Newws—

women who

J : |gestures and a keen ear for shad- Louis A. Kirch, State Day programs. program. Society on April 30. St., to hear reviews of “AutobiogPersonal Notes

MR. AND MRS. LYMAN S. AYRES are leaving this week-end for a visit with Mrs. Ayres’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Ferguson, of Newport News, Va. . . . Mrs. William W. Garstang returned vesterday from Louisville, Ky, where she went early this week

Returning early next week from vacation trips to Old Point

ings in inflections, her roles become portraits .of persons she has known. More than one playgoer, familiar with her aptituce for “lifting” a {gesture from one person and an ex- | pression from another, has delighted [in | portrayals. | For Minnie, Mrs. Schofield con-

| University.

identifying the sources of her

diana and Michigan. She was a member of Mu Chapter at Butler |

From 1929 to 1932 she served as president of the Woman's Department Club. At present she is W. D. C. educational funds chair- | man, program committee chairman,! third vice chairman of the courtesy

Islands Have Charm of Own

Islands have a charm that is always distinctive.

raphy With Letters” (Phelps) and of “You and Heredity (Arman Scheinself) by Mrs. Fred L. Pettijohn,

Mrs. Howard H. Trager, 314 N.|of the sorority and first pr Audubon Road, will entertain IR-|0f the local alumnae chapter; | INGTON GARDEN CLUB mem- Irene Boughton, executive secretary; Dermet and Miss Jo Ann Young, | bers at 2 p. m, next Friday. On the |Miss Frances E. Westcott, national

3819 N. Maan

| Lundy will be Miss Katherine Rubush, Indianapolis alumnae presi-|ters and who will attend the lunche dent,

At the speakers’ table with Mrs. Indianapolis young |are members of Delta Zeta chap= |

who will introduce special eon are the Misses Marjorie Byrum,

guests: Mrs. O. H. Hayes, a founder Maryrosalie Consoer and Clarabelle

esident | Langdon, DePauw; Miss Barbara Miss | Taylor, Indiana, and Miss Edna Mc=

Franklin,

|fessed she dipped into recollections of a Scotch friend of her grand[mother and a girl whom the grandmother once brought back from

committee, and a member of the ex-| Perhaps it is because a stretch of ecutive committee of the Depart- open water separating the traveler ment of Literature and Drama. At! from the mainland where pleasures | ] one time she coached the speaking and cares are usually mixed, lets |Scotland with her, “Indeed, "twas choir of the American Association of down all the bars : ‘manny and manny a year-r ago.” University Women. y she said. shipping unconsciously into | Minnie's Scotch burr, “Americans speak with a falling inflection,” she commented. "And {there is a rhythm in the Scotch hrogue, for example, that is utterly {different from the Irish lilt.”

" " on BETH SCHOFIELD packs an im-

Comfort, Va., will be Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Federman and Mr, and Mrs. John E. Resor who left late last week. . , . Dr. and Mrs, William E. Gabe have returned from a trip to New Orleans which included stops at Biloxi, Miss, and Raton Rouge, La. Their daughter, Patricia. was to arrive today from the East where she has been with the Seehauszen tour of Washington, New York and Nvack. N. Y. where she visited Helen Hayes’ home. Her sister, Sue. was to come todav from DePauw University Miss Mary Jo Albright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ware Albright, participated this week in the vearly concert of the Vassar Dance Group She is a freshman at Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. The Dance Group is an extra-curi icular organization which gives its 26 members an opportunity to study and develop technique of movement and dance composition.

i n vel E Hunt Algonquin Club Pla s No 99 mense amount of energy and effi-

AN EASTER EGG HUNT with a novel twist will be participated [ciency into her short and plumpish in by Algonquin Riding Club members Sunday. “Hunters” will be | . Characteristic is her ability

| program will be colored slides of |treasurer; Mrs. Robert W. Platte, nn thel an : | Indianapolis gardens shown by Miss state chairman for central and | oc emed initation SeTVi nt ira { Mildred Campbell. [northern Indiana: Miss Mildred] J ya or i hel : SY oy New officers of the club are Mrs. | Potter of Evansville, southern Ie | on ot rr ro Sy AarVIA ey Lone pars. . wh. 2% wileh it H. L. Mate, president; Mis, Trager, diana chairman; Miss Gladys Hand | SORORITY Manav carlin Dreq Bx ma, 8] ih by Ju ain; ® 1 vice president; Mrs, George Price, president of the Ft. Wayne alumnae cod ea dinner ol Buckley's Regs ne coast ol Southern Lalilornia, 1S seeretary; Mrs. Jennie Pitcher, |chapter: Mrs. Lyman McClain, | ng. 8 omer at = w OVS eSliY es lop ol 3 nomiein Folie | [reasurer, and Mrs. H, B. Tilman. president of the Franklin alumnae taurant in Cumberland, Ey PVC Ae 2 Wain Wluc husiorian, chapter; Miss Janet Bevan, DePauw| ALPHA BETA CHI SORORITY « v €| The ships dock at Avalon, a snug| The 56th birthday of the CATH- chapter president; Miss Jane Hud- will install new officers following a Irie Souts Of Join Merton Artllittle town out of old Spain, and ARINE MERRILL CLUB will be ob- {S50 Idista Shane reson Dd dinner Wodnsey st the Viste) pon 5 Co sie 11a than] BE only city on the island. | served tomorrow at the home of | college chapter president Io Rsning on. i ey hy Miss Jeanne any other person connected with the Avalon borders a crescent harbor|Miss Helena Sipe, 5202 Grandview | Mrs. Platie will present the ative ITs ey pres! ent; Wi Leroy Civic “Mrs Moonlight " opening of white sand and blue wales and in| Drive. Mrs. Hugh H. Hanna will jy award to an active chapter mem- oh Yice presiden i Mrs. Jerry Monday night, will be her 37th 1 its tile and stucco architecture, talk on “Plato and Aristotle.” nc RE Aye chan Wheeler, secretary; Miss Margaret . y play. strolling costumed troubadors, an- ————— ber who has achieved high stand- Baker, treasurer; Miss Mildred | ing in scholarship and extra-curri-| Coghill, sergeant-at-arms: Miss Sue

C. Norman Green is second with 29 - te Ferre =v cient stage coach and palm trees , 4 {| el : 3 quired io be mounted and carry their own containers for the | person. roles to his credit. lhas preserved the atmosphere and | Stephens Gr oup to Mect cular activities. She will also pre-| Harting, chaplain, and Mrs. George required to 1 3 | The Stephens College Alumnae sent an attendance cup to the chap-| Patridge, pledge captain. Miss De=

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BEGINNING with a role in “Polvxena” presented by the Civics predecessor, the Little Theater, in the]

Are You Leading a Casual Life?

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Se ghisnges for We Npeoming| Eagles Nest his dreams fulfilled with | 1 A 1d 3 1er working, Mrs. {wild boar and mountain sheep, | Schofield sald with an indulgent prizes for steady nerve and keen| (twinkle in her brown eves. “Bet she | aye Quail "about d and are st in| |gets her name in the program! pgs EE a ee Sho | credits yet.” | season. This is a real vacation spot. | | Mrs. Schofield could use a day]™ hiss everyiiing. # | containing a few more than the | Saturday and Sunday are the days! (regulation 24 hours. “Tomorrow—1I for the Cherry Blossom Festival in| wonder if I could squeeze in a mat-| Washington, F. G. Malbeuf, Ameri-| inee of ‘Arsenic and Old Lace’ be- can Airlines sales manager here ad- | | tween my letters and the marketing. | vises. Because of early spring cold | I remember Laura Hope Crews when the blossoming of the cherry trees | ~whoops, my cue,” and she scooted has heen delayed a week, he savs. | oft the trunk. Last Sunday thousands of people | The odds are that she “squeezed” lined the Lincaln Memorial pool rim | in the matinee. And if she ever de- to look for the first signs of the | cides to “squeeze” in another side- pink and white flowers. All they | line-—say, lion taming--she probably saw were large about-to-burst buds. | could do that, too, without disturb- Lincoln Memorial is a short distance | RE Sy arand ot her lighuy frosted from Washington Airport which is ‘kK . Be Schofie jus - vie y y y p Se Sytaary, Dah Bohohe Just na |Fetviced daily by two flights from |

WET Net ay KD)

. [to keep a half-dozen interests “in| She admits that the sorority presi- . lv iforni hi i S r er . m's roperty A . : : hy Sorority presi- color of early California. : . eggs which wil A any P. ©. Bonhan's: property [the air” at the same time with the dency is a 7-day-a-week job. “When| Because the warm Japanese cur- Association will meet Thursday | ter with the largest number of un- lores Schlanzer is in charge of the from 30th to 53th Sts. TN ' : perfect composure of a juggler. I became president, I vowed I'd get ry : . ina | Night with Mrs. DeForest Bowman, [dergraduates and alumnae present.| dinner, assisted by Mrs. Wh Decorations for the chicken dinner at the clubhouse following invie 4 ’ : a gel rent flows through the Catalina 7 . ; : Y Vis. eeler : Srolalion LHD ipAen rhc : LO Minnie is her second role for the everything done in six days. .| Channel, the island is much warmer | 9218 E. Walnut St. Committees planning State Dayland Mrs. Carl K. DeFalco. the hunt will feature bowls of brightly colored Easter eggs on each |Civic this year. She also appeared There has been ONE Sunday when in winter than the California main- | p— table. Arranging the event are Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Cheney, chaire ! “Tw Island.” the J ary! I haven't b : a ; he 2 fie] . : hy es . jm WO on an isiand, 1€ Januar) een pounding away at my land and is paradoxically cooler in men, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Doman, Mrs, Willis E. Kuhn, Miss lorod : Both rol we en | tv titer e bi Vil ; adoxically c Louise Dickson and Ronald B. Woodard (production. Both roles were pre- Lypewriter answering letters. | the summer. It is far from the heat SE ; ‘ be (pared while she is holding down the| “When do +I study my lines? TI of mainland deserts and fanned by ‘ . r job of national president of Kappa take ‘em to bed with me.” She is! ocean breezes. | Clean Ash Travs 1n On Sorting Clothes Kappa Gamma Sorority. {as thorough about preparation of a| There is almost every kind of an y Sorti totes before Jaunderi In addition to that job and her role as she is in handling the soror- outdoor sport available. Warm Suds t Sorting clothes before laundering parts in Civic productions, she jty job. Given a part, she makes! The up and down golf course, | LS K lis one of the most important steps ; i c pari, she makes] I ¢own 2 COUrses | : ole LL Y1€, ToS POriank 3 o somehow finds time to take an ac-| tracks for the library where she not open to visitors, is sporty and a test! Transparent glass ash trays, with in the WHO ala) Joutine, 1 tive part in the Woman's Depart- only reads the entire play but all for an expert's game. Bathing and | an initial or monogram etched in Most househo ds, five ustinet Cass. ment and Propylaeum Clubs, to lec- the reviews of previous perform- lounging on the sand under shelter- | _ fications are called for. White cot- ture on the drama, and to share the ances that she can find. For “Mrs. ing palms is always a pleasure for the bottom of are tons and linens go into one pile; management and do the marketing Moonlight” she even dug up the the idle and the outdoors lover. Deep among the new household gadgets. silks, synthetics and woolens go into for the Pendleton Pike household Iondon reviews of the Benn Levy sea fishing is unexcelled and game Besides being capacious enough Rothey ile) cole clothes in a Rank meiges nes Fushi, Evepent play to obtain sidelights on Minnie | fish abound in nearby waters, i : ; vird pile: very heavy pieces, re-'M. Schofield, and her father and as other actress ad * » . here ie Yan ane = 9 sy 3 : REY esses had “done” her.! There is music and dancing in| suit the smoker, they are dainty and | ; jess of fabric, go into another|mother, Mr. and Mrs, Stephen T. Fn Ry ee Smamental. Dest of all, they are pile, and, finally, very soiled pieces Bogert. 2% a | 2.000 000 casino, There are glass- | easy to clean go into a fifth pile. She also belongs to the Backstage! UNLIKE MOST PERSONS. Beth bottom power hoats that take you | Emptying ash trays is not enough Mid pw€RE bp )jbB Club and the Affairs Committee of alwavs prepares her own costumes gover a wonderland of . rowth | : tter what . . : Eran . . : iderland of marine growth | ee a uy = Legion Dinner Wondai [the Civic Theater. In her spare for a play, too. In this she usually and over schools of fish {lashing the composition of the tray. They! LCGION Danner Monday) moments che gardens, with delphin- | is aided by her mother, Mrs, Bogert. | bright and varied colors ihroush | should be washed frequently to keep| Bruce P. Robison Unit 133 of the ium and madonna lilies as her spe- Who shares her deep interest in the clear waters E them from becoming stained and American Legion Auxiliary will have | cialties—"and columbine, roses and | theater, There is ‘'vachting and for those | ugly. If ‘ash trays, whether of dinner at 6:30 p. m. Monday in the iris on the side.” The two are inseparable. Even|who like to fly, regular service wg glass, metal or china, are soaked Central Christian Church, together| She has been handling the same| when they are not in the same play,| amphibians to the es hii briefly in warm suds and scrubbed with the Posi, Squadron and Jun-!tough schedule for years. For two as they sometimes are, they invari-| Ten acres are taken up hv the | with a stiff brush or steel wool, iors. ach group will nave a busi- years before she became her soror- ably appear together at rehearsals! ganta Catalina Bird Ds {ree to! y vt h . 3 s . | < ti > o . 1 3 se es . , las c rs ” - . Xa 4 ’ » C : they wild not become offensive | ness meeting following dinner ity’s president at last summer's con 311} Sond Sach other a hand back-|the public. It includes one of the] 0 rd er Olmalices wi makeup | finest world collections of birds, and | "TWO or Ba 20) ges. oth were in in itself is worth a trip to the island. | slan 4 : | The rugged interior is another] fra Js. ogert, silver-haired and different land. It's the old West. | ae hE: Was absorbed at Cattle roam on the open range. | “arsal in assembling, from Buffalo and deer and fox are com- | Jarious racks and chests and trunks, mon sights, TV * V [ Gl . . the mater ials for Beth's three cos- | A hunter finds not far from | wift Value . . . . Gleaming White . 3 95 With Your Old Steve

No down payment with rade. Casual clothes are the order of the day. . Convenient mont v terms a Jow as 1.00 including smalil carrving charge. Delivered and installed above the floor,

Bridal Dinner This Evening

Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Irving Barrows will en i i at Holly Hock Hill with a bridal dinner En Bi unig

| and Karl Chenoweth, who are to be married at 3:30 p. m. tomorrow in|

They call for an entirely different type of shoe, low heeled and easy to walk in, but It is the pride of the

Paragon Shop to offer you an impressive

for their daughter, Rosalind,

Frederic I. Barrows to Give | | |

excessively smart. With de luxe features usually found essively sma

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| Broadway Methodist Church, rehearsal. l Guests with the betrothed couple | : : tor | | will be Messrs, and Mesdames Jean | “> Lyle Withrow who was Miss | Lacey,

C. Hollis Hull and John | Dorothy Jane Atkins before her re- | Bruhn,

Mrs. M. Lair Hull, Con- | cent marriage,

nersville; Miss Marjorie Pendleton, Guests in addition 0 Mrs. With- |

| Chicago; Miss Ruth Chenoweth, | row included her mother and her) sister of the bridegroom; Alvin | aunt, Mrs. Walter Atkins and Miss | Barrows, brother of the bride: | Lou Jane Roberts; Mrs. Fred DoepGene Chenoweth of Goshen, the| pers, Lafayette: Mrs. Walker's

mother, Mrs, Thomas Carson; Mes- |

- bridegroom’s brother, and the Hulls’ | daughter, Harriet Ruth, who will| be flower girl, | dames Garth Marine, William Cool- { » ing, Buford Cadle, Howland Crawford, Earl Thurber, John Lookabill, Mesdames Burchard Carr. Robert | Roscoe Batts, Robert Pruyn, Mar- | Walker and William Millikan en- | shall Kealing. Ralph Gatti, Richard | tertained last night at the home| Hill and Harry Echard and Miss | | of the latter, 2510 E. 59th St. for! Sally Bosman,

The dinner will precede the wedding | |

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only in ranges ng for far more! | . . | al | - Compare these values with others selection of colors, styles and sizes at com fortably low budget prices.

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