Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1941 — Page 14
‘ar Touches The Food Basket: No Shortage Of Staples Likely
By PETER EDSON Times Special Writer .
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9.—Another six months and this war may,
be reaching not only right into the family market basket but it will | also be doing things to the very paper bags you won't be able to get | to carry home the things you wor’t be able to buy——not because of i high prices but simply because a lot of the fancy groceries dependent on imports won't be available. Cooks may even have to change the seasoning in some of their pet recipes. Deliveries by stores may be eliminated. Milk routes may have to be combined. And some people may even be riding a bicycle to mar- | ket instead of driving the old family jallopy. ! This somewhat eye-opening view of what might be called “the tuation” comes from no less responsible a source than the division of industrial economy of the Department of Commerce. You are advised by the experts of this division that their dire pre- . diction should not alarm you unduly, but it should wake you up to the
"THE INDIA
age of items like meat, potatoes, applesauce, bread and. vitamins. So far, the only two things which have had, their impact on the
civilian population as a whole have been the scrap aluminum drive and ' ean take care -of all the customers in a given district. And what
the silk stocking thing. Regionally, of: course, there have been ‘power
shortages in the Southeast and gasoline shortages in the East, but.
those matters are only the beginning, The niceties of life will be the hardest hit from now on.
Mention was made of the very paper: bags in which the groceries are carried home. You wouldn't think there would be any shortages of paper, but papers of all kinds are being used in unbelievable quantities by thie defense program, and paper mill capacity is limited. Parts are wrapped in paper for shipment to assembly plants. Finished products are paper-wrapped for protection, so a “save-paper-bags” campaign is not outside the realm of things to come. :
Shortage of heavy paper hits the box and container industry from
nearly every angle. One place it will hit hard isin the use of paper milk “bottles,” which have gained wide acceptance. The only substi-
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In areas where the gas shortage becomes acute and a labor shortage develops there may be a Government-sponsored effort to have milk routes of ‘competing dairies combined so that a single delivery
goes for milk routes could easily be extended for deliveries of all sorts, including those of ice cream and :
: popcorn men. The tin shortage has already been talked about plenty, but that
- hits the market basket toter indirectly because canners next year will have to shift to containers their customers are not used to. As to: what will go into the tins, bottles, bags, papers or substitute containers, here’s a preliminary picture: : Tea may become scarcer because of a lack of shipping space. Olive oil from Italy has almost. disappeared. Some still comes from . Spain and Portugal, but if the war spreads {o those countries goodby olive oil. As to why the olive growing areas of the United States can’t produce more olive oil, the answer seems to be that fancy prices for bottled and canned olives take nearly all the pick from American
groves.
’
But Imports Grow Scarce
product. Tapioca, which formerly came mainly from the Dutch East Indies, will have to come from Brazil or maybe not at all. Cocoa previously imported from West Africa will likewise have to come in increasing quantities from Brazil. ‘ All the imports from Central and South America will be made available to the fullest extent shipping space permits, as part of thehemisphere defense plan. , This applies particularly to the banana trade. To shut that off wotild simply ruin the Latin-American banana
republics. - - 2 ’ There is plenty of coffee in South America, but the Arabian, Java, Mocha and Turkish coffees, sometimes used in blending, are disappearing from the market. The spice trade probably will suffer severely, and that is what will make cooks relearn some of their tricks. Home-grown mustard, sage, peppers, ginger and the domestic spices will still be available. There is a two years’ reserve of black pepper. But all the trick spices from. the Indies, the Isles of Spice and the Mediterranean—cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg, white pepper and even vanilla—lack of these may make the old slice of onion and the parsley sprig work overtime.
tute here is to start’increasing the use of glass bottles again.’ Smyrna
Married in August and September Ceremonies
future facts of living. There is and there apparently will be no short- figs and Albanian dates will give way to the domestic
i Society—
Children's Museum Guild Will Open Season With Luncheon Friday
P.-T. A. School THE FASHION Next Tuesday PARADE Lo At Claypool n's most mportan
the season's most important County Leaders Will
fashion event — the New York fall openings of Amer. Be Instructed
ica's ace designers—will be analyzed for Indianapolis women this week in a series of articles on The Times Women's Page. The pace-setting style parade offers a rich array of creations carrying the well known names of Milgrim, Jay Thorpe, Fira Benenson and others.
Watch for the coverage of the world of fashion's No. | headline news on
The Indianapolis Times Women's Page
Marion County Parent-Teacher workers will meet next Tuesday at 9:30 a. m. in the Claypool Hotel Assembly Room. for a school of instruction given by the Indiana Cengress of Parents and Teachers. Officers, chairmen and other interested members of P.-T. A. units may at-
tend. - -| Other county schools will be sponsored, presided over by Mrs. Henry F. Goll, District director, this week. The purpose of the sessions is to train local workers and help organize local work so that a more effective child welfare program may be carried on in the community. This morning Mrs. Robert McKay of Shelbyville presided at a 9:30 o'clock school for Shelby County workers in the Thomas A. Hendricks School in Shelbyville. The -|Hancock: County meeting will be held tomorrow in the Fortville High School, with Mrs. Dallas Barnhart in charge. Bc Mrs. Edward J. Morrison is chairman of arrangements for the Bartholomew County meeting to be held Friday at the Wilson School in Columbus.
Antiques Exhibited. At Kentucky Fair
Times Special
' THE SHARP TAP of the president’s gavel is as much a sound of September as the school-bells which started ringing this week. Women’s organizations of the city are anonuncing their opening 1941-42 meetings to be held this week and next.
Children’s Museum Guild members will inaugurate their season with a luncheon Friday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Donald Alexander will preside. Mrs. Herbert Pinnell, chairman of the Museum's hobby room, and Mrs. W. T. Finney, chairman of after-school activities for children, will report on their plans for, the year. A luncheon meeting Monday at the Woodstock Club will be at- - ‘tended by members of the Auxiliary to the Indianapolis Orphans’ ‘Home. The Auxiliary’s president is Miss Frances Kearby. ; Mrs. John E. Messick will preside at the opening meeting of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Board, to be held Thursday at 10 a. m. at the Nursery. A foursome including Mesdames J. Raymond Lynn, Frank Hoke and Edward C. Vajen and Miss Emma Claypool will make up one of the tables at the Propylaeum Club’s September bridge party opening the fall season tomorrow morning. Another reservation is that of Mrs. William B. Burford, co-chairman for the day with Mrs. Paul Richey. With Mrs. Maxwell Droke will be Mesdames Herbert King, Charles DeGraw and Raymond C. Fox. Other early reservations have been made by Mesdames Howard J. Lacy, Walter H. Green, Gerry M. Sanborn, and John J. Bibler.
Highland's Bridge Luncheon Is Tomorrow
“BACK TO INDIANAPOLIS” will be the theme of the bridge luncheon planned by women members of the Highland Golf and Country Club for tomorrow. Bridge games will follow a 12:30 o'clock buffet luncheon. : Reservations have been made by Mrs. William V. Kingdon and i by Mrs. Charles Richardson for two tables each. Other table hostesses will be Mesdames James J. McGuire, J. R. Moynahan e 7 and Wilbur Sicks. .
Committees N amed by Auxiliary UN
Memorial Unit 3, American Le gion Auxiliary, held its September business meeting last night at the Hotel Antlers to enable mem= bers to attend the national conven= tion in Milwaukee, The group has been invited to the installation of
post officers tonight at: 8 p. m. in the Forty and Eight Chateau. Past
3 oy
Mrs. Paul Feucht is chairman of the committee in charge,
which includes Mesdames Sicks, Arch V. Grossman, Michael J.
Duffecy Jr., Edward M. Curry, L. E. Hess and Jesse A. Mitchell.
Parties Honor Ruth Coler
MISS LOUISE ELLEN TRIMBLE entertained ‘last night at < her home on Spring Mill Road with a closet shower for Miss Ruth
Coler, who will be married to Theodore Scott, Sept. 20, in the First
Presbyterian - Church. ‘ Among the guests were Mrs. Wendell P. Coler, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Elmer Scott, the prospective bridegroom’s mother, and Mrs. William H. Trimble, co-hostess with her daughter.
1. Mrs. John Lawler was Miss Ruth Spreckelmeyer before her marriage Aug. 31. (RamosPorter Photo.)
The Bridal Scene— Brides-to-Be Entertained
16. (Voorhis Photo.)
Service Read in
2. Miss LaVerne Ray became the bride of Laurence White in a ceremony performed Aug.
Ensign and Mrs. Robert T. Reid Are on Southern Wedding Trip;
Klein was married to Robert L. Crull. (RamosPorter Photo.)
Catholic Group Will Convene
| 3. In a service read Sept. 1, Miss Anna
Christ Church
at Woodstock the night preceding the wedding.
Others were Mrs. Richard Bruce DeMars of Anderson, Mrs. Florence Scott Herdrich and Miss Lue McWhirter, who with Miss
Trimble will be Miss Coler’s attendants; Mesdames William Stout, Victor Kingdon and Thomas Billings; the Misses Betty Tharp,
Marjorie Raiser and Anne Elliott.
Several teas will be given for Miss Coler soon. The first will . . be at Mrs. Mason King’s home in ‘Arden tomorrow afternoon. from 8 to 5 o'clock, with Mrs. King and Mrs. Richard Boatman as hostesses. Mrs. Scott will pour. Guests will include Mrs. Coler, members of the bridal party and other friends of the honor guest. Mrs. DeMars will give a tea on Sunday for the engaged youhg woman, at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Geupel,
in Williams Creek. On Sept. 17 Mrs. Coler will give a tea for her
daughter and with Mr. Coler will entertain with the bridal dinner
JANE JORDAN -
you
DEAR JANE JORDAN-—I was reared in a small town and came to the city to live after: my marriage: I am trying to cultivate my husband’s friends, most of them business associates. I always have tried to be well-mannered, well-read and smartly turned out. I enjoy an occasional cigaret and highball as much as anyone. I always felt that my husband had a quiet, refined nature, but he seems to think these friends are “swell.” The second time I ever saw them the men and women continually mace obscene remarks to each other. One woman was very chummy with another’s husband and another told my husband a very bald story. He evidently thought it was all right but the language was in such bad taste that I was bored and would like to have gone home, but I didn’t want them to know I couldn't take it. What would you have done?- Did my idea of decency go down with Noah's Ark? How should I treat these people when they come to my home? The thing that infuriates me the most is that my . husband seems to think such actions are all right, but they disgust me very thoroughly. . MRS. M. L. E. ” ” 2 s Answer—The only thing you can do is to mark-time where your husband’s friends are concerned. As long as they are business associates it is important that you get along with them, The world is full of all kinds of people and many of them are vulgar. Doubtless you have moved in a fairly limited group in a small town and have not been called upon to meet many different types of people. .It comes as a shock to you that there are vulgar people in the world who still are worthy enough to make your husband like them. He has known them longer than you have and has found thein good working companions. He must have discovered other qualities in them which ehable him to overlook their atrocious taste. It is noteworthy that in choosing a wife he selected a woman
like himself and not like one of his friends.
It is quite possible for you to be in a group but not of it. You can maintain a tolerant attitude without joining in the vulgarities. You can win their friendship without becoming intimate. Try not to
' let their offensive language blind you to the worth-while attributes
. which they may possess. In the meantime you gradually will make other friends for whom feel more kinship. In time they may displace the others, at t in part. Your husband may come.to prefer the new group
which you attract. : JANE JORDAN.
EE
Recipe for GRAPE-JUICEADE 2 cups grape juice I1/2 cups sugar 24 cup orange juice 4 cups water oo I/s cup lemon juice Boil the sugar and water together for five minutes. Cool, then add the strained fruit juices. Place in
your ICE Refrigerator to chill. When ready to serve, pour over crushed Polar ICE. Serves six.
: POL A we ICE AND
FUEL CO. 2000 NORTHWESTERN AVE. SAN ; 2302 W. MICHIGAN ST. 1902.5 EAST ST. A
VV dP
By Club
Miss Mary Kathryn Sexton will be guest of honor tonight at a dinner and linen shower given by Miss Helen Lawler at the Sundial Tearoom. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. William L.
.|Lawler. Miss Sexton will be mar-
ried to Frank J. Delaney Jr. on Saturday in SS. Peter & Paul Cathedral. Guests will include Mrs. Timothy
- |P. Sexton, mother of the bride-to-
be; Miss Rosemary Delaney of Burlington, Iowa, and Mrs. Frank Colgate Dale of Muncie." Other guests will be Mesdames
.|John Sexton, Joseph Sexton, Law-
rence Sexton, Joseph Toner and Leo Stodtmiller, the Misses Julia Dwyer, Mary Isabel Schneider, Marjorie ‘Boyle, Genevieve Hile, Mary Jo Maher, Mary Ellen Flaherty, Mary Theis, Peggy Carr, Mary Louise, Theresa and Ann Keach. With Miss Ida Jane Worsham and Miss Mary Louise Ohleyer, Miss Sexton is being entertained today by members of the Stitch and Chatter Club with a luncheon at “the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Miss Worsham will become the bride of Dr. James Scott Walker Saturday in the Carrollton Avenue Reformed Church and Miss Ohleyer also will be married on Saturday, to Frank J. Lauck at the Church of Christ the King. Members of the club are Mrs. Hodge Worsham of Detroit, Mrs. Francis A. Ohleyer and Mrs. Sexton, mothers of the honor guests; Mesdames John Minta, Edward Schneider Jr., August Souchon and Gertrude V. Borst and Mrs. A. P. Lauck, mother of Mr. Lauck. Three miniature brides were to form the centerpiece at the luncheon. Gifts were to be presented the prospective brides. reat Miss Ohleyer was honored at a crystal shower last night given by Miss Marjorie Mueller and Miss Mary Ritchie. An exact replica of the wedding party, bride and groom and attendants, formed a part of the table decorations, in the fall colors to be used at the wedding Saturday. 2 » 2
Mrs. Raymond Robbins of Salem, Ill, will entertain tonight. at the home of her mother, Mrs. O. E. Smith, for Miss Janet Hill, whose marriage to John Fletcher Ball will take place Oct. 5. Decorations will be in blue, the bridal color. : Guests at the shower will be Mrs. Lew Hill and Mrs. Frank Ball, mothers of the engaged couple; Mesdames John Cazosie, Ray Sears, Don Underwood, Wallace DeHart, Robert Pflumm, John McKinstray, William Richter, George Stark and Miss Barbara Sarsfield. 2 5 8 :
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Watso 501 N. Bancroft Ave. are announcing the approaching marriage of their daughter, Catherine, to George C. Conner, son of Mrs. Carrie S. Conner, 219 E. 21st St. The ceremony will take place Sunday in the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church. Miss Matson is a graduate of John Herron Art School and Mr, Conner was graduated ‘ from Purdue University, where he was a member of Theta Chi Fraternity. : Hostess at a recent shower for Miss Matson was Miss Mary Howard, 2258 N. Meridian St. Guests were Mrs. Charles D. Vawter and the Misses Virginia Bugbee, Vera Adamson, Bertha Evans, Elizabeth and Margaret Presnall, Doris Allen, Juanita Vawter, Mary McLin and Pauline Howard.
Hostess to Club
| The Con
A costume suit of green sheer
Legion Group To Give Party
Installation of officers will follow a 12:30 o'clock covered dish luncheon planned by members of the Osric Mills Watkins Auxiliary of the American Legion for Thursday. Hostess will be Mrs. Robert Bryson, 2431 N. Meridian St. a . Mrs. O. L. Watkins will install Mrs. William R. Bolen, president; Mrs. Harry Nolen, vice president; Mrs. Donald M. Gordon, secretary; Mrs. George Peterson, treasurer; Mrs. J. E. Fettig, sergeant-at-arms,
and Mrs. Lynn Knowlton, historian. Mrs. Watkins will be chaplain. At a business meeting led by Mrs. Clinton J. Ancker, retiring president, Mrs. R. D. McDaniel will present the 12th District Council report ' and Miss Kitty Jo Denbo will talk on her experiences at the Girls’ State last summer. Mrs. Ancker will report on the recent states convention to which she was a delegate. Chairman for a card party given by the unit Oct. 21 in Ayres’ auditorium will be Mrs. Erwin B. McComb. Her assistants will be Mrs. Kurt. W. Schmidt, tickets; Mrs. Leroy Ford, table prizes; Mrs. Nolen, special prizes; Mrs. Edward Harmening, candy, and Mrs. Peterson, cards and tallies. Unit members will continue Red Cross sewing throughout the winter under the direction of Mrs. Harmening. They completed 50 garments, including skirts, baby shirts and nightgowns, at summer sessions,
Tri Chi Chapter Will Install Officers
New officers of Gamma Chapter, Tri Chi Sorority, will be installed at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the home of Miss Mary Helen Emerson. They are Miss Marie Juergens, president; Miss Nora Louise Bauer, vice president; Miss Helen Longerich, secretary, ‘and Miss Mary Huber, treasurer.
Wed Aug. 23
Photo Reflex Photo, Before her marriage Aug, 23,
ni
Ensign and Mrs. Robert T. Reid are on a southern wedding trip following their marriage late yesterday afternoon at Christ Episcopal Church on the Circle. The bride was Miss Pauline Elizabeth Pearce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Starling Pearce. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Howard T. Reid of Salem.
wool was chosen by the bride for traveling, worn with ginger brown accessories and a corsage of green orchids. She will be at home later in Indianapolis when Ensign Reid returns to his ship, the U. 8S. S. Prairie, on the Atlantic coast. Preceding the 4:30 o'clock service yesterday read by the Rev. E. Ainger Powell, Edward McAvoy, boy soprano with the church choir, sang «“O Perfect Love.” Organist was Chester Heath. Palms and cibotium ferns formed a background for the ceremony in the chancel, which was lighted by six large single cathedral ‘candles and others in a 15-branch candelabrum of wrought iron. White tuberoses, gladioli and chrysanthemum pompons were in two white altar vases and the choir rail was flanked by two large blue vases of white chrysanthemums, pompons and gladioli. Sister Attendant
Miss Mary Ann Pearce was her sister’s maid of honor, preceded in the wedding procession by Mrs. John A. Hare of Noblesville, another sister, and Mrs. James W. Feighner. The bride entered with her father. James Lockwood stood with Ensign Reid as best man and ushers were Mr.. Feighner and Howard Rolfe. Tiny pleating edged the sweetheart neckline, .the short peplum and the long sleeves of the bridal gown of ivory faille taffeta. The full skirt fell from a shirred waist into a short train. The bride wore a pleated coronet of the taffeta, holding a‘ fingertip veil of illusion, and carried a prayerbook covered with green orchids. : Attendants at the wedding’ were in identical gowns, Miss Pearce’s of
powder blue and the bridesmaids’.
of copper, with floor-length skirts. The maid of honor carried a bouquet of copper, rust and yell rosés and pompon chrysanthemupfs with Croton foliage and cop streamers. Blue delphinium predom nated in the bridesmaids’ bouquets. Mrs. Pearce had a corsage of pink rubrum lilies. and sweetheart roses with her gown of soft grayblue and matching accessories. The mother of the bridegroom also was in blue and wore a corsage of pink tuberous begonias and sweetheart
roses. : Reception Followed Assistants at a reception in the Pearce home were Mrs. Thomas Billings and Miss Jane Snyder. The wedding cake was surrounded with strings of smilax and the punch bowl on the terrace was placed among: smilax and fruit. Arrangements of yellow and bronze pompon : chrysanthemums and Rome Glory roses were in the living room, and small Dresden vases of the flowers were on the coffee table and in the hall. Mrs. Reid is a graduate of Stephens College and of the Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy. She has been a therapist at the City Hospital. Ensign Reid was graduated from Purdue University,
where he belonged to Delta Tal
lta Fraternity. Among out-of-town guests with Mr. and Mrs. Reid were Miss Helen
{Reid, an aunt of the bridegroom; ‘land Mrs, John Mitchell and Miss
Catherine Louden, all of Salem; his and Susie, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hare and John A, Hare, all of Noblesville, CE
Sponsors Card Party
‘Social Club will sponcard party at 2:
In Springfield
Women in the Indianapolis Diocesan Council will participate with members of other Midwestern dioceses in a regional conference of
the National Council of Catholic
Women at Springfield, Ill, Sept. 21, 22 and 23. Springfield Diocesan Council members will entertain women from $he Indianapolis, Chicago and St. Louis territories. Mrs. Thomas J. Murphy, president of the Council’s Indianapolis District, has asked each parish council chairman to send at least one delegate to the conference. Conference headquarters will be at the Abraham Lincoln Hotel in Springfield, Special bus rates and a bus schedule will be announced with program highlights later this week. National N. C. C. W. headquarters in Washington have announced that all Catholic women in the United States may attend the sessions. However, the program will be planned to meet the specific needs of the region in order to reach a greater number of women in Midwestern parishes.
Books Luncheon
The Altar Society of St. Catherine’s Church will sponsor a card party and luncheon at the church, Shelby and Tabor Sts., at 12:15 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs. Paul Kress and Mrs. John Godecker will be in charge.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. Sept. 9.—Nationally known horsemen who are attending the Kentucky State Fair Horse Show here are among the spirited bidders at the Fair's Antique Show. Dealers from as far as Chicago, Jamestown, Pa., and Oklahoma City, Okla; are among the antique exhibitors. : The exhibits range from early English furniture to Gay Nineties pressed. glass. Displayed are valuable Italian cameos brought to this country for exhibit at the World's Fair. They are part of the collection of Genario Russo of Italy. Featured in this group are cameos
years of intricate. carving. They will - be presented to -the Vatican after exhibit in this country. Included in the show is a collection of old Sheffield plate, chosen
of Brainar rd Lemon.
Talk Is On How to Get Most For Dollar
Mrs. H. H. Arnholter of the Better Business Bureau, will talk on “How to Get the Most for Your Dollar” next Tuesday at a meeting of the Mary Conkle Circle of the Third Christian Church. Mrs. J. E. Martin, 510. W. 44th St., will be hostess. Mrs. Edward Donaldson, gresident, will be in charge. Devotions will be given by Mrs. W. T. Lemons and Mrs. H. T. Alumbaugh will sing. s Mrs. R. H. Love, luncheon chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Ben Bacon, Chic Jackson, A. D Voyles, Fletcher Savage, A. F. Walsman, Joe Burrows, C. R. Matthews,
and C. W. Ross. Mrs. M. V. Warner is the program chairman.
depiéting ‘the 14 Si tions: of: the’ Cross which uired more than 10
from the nationally famed collection’
| ship;
Department Commander John A. Watkins will be installing officer. ' Mrs. Elsie Collins, unit president, has announced that members continue their American Red Cross activity during the winter, sewing each Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Edith Sedberry, 3006 Graceland Ave,"
Names Committees
Committees announced by Mrs. Collins are: Mrs. Gladys Pribble and Mrs. Myrtle Buehl, Americanism and national defense; Miss Irene Sa+ telle, Boys’ and Girls’ Sehools; Miss Flora Douglass, Mrs. Mabel Kerrick land Mrs: Vivian Hughes, budget; M-esdames Evelyn Hering, Helen Vlases, Elsie Arata, Julia Woodard, tommunity service; Mrs. Edith DeWitt, courtesy; Mrs. Louise Gordon, emblems; trophies and awards; Mrs. Sedberry and Miss Ruby Pribble, junior ‘sponsors; Mrs. Mayme Moor= man, employment; Miss Marie Shank; Knightstown Home; = Mrs. Helen Vlasés, legislative; Mrs, Emily Francke and Mrs. DeWitt, member. - Mrs. Florence Hoover and Mrs. Marie Freeman, co-chairmen; Mrs. Ellen Poole, - national news; Mrs. Ruth Caylor and Miss Sadie Douglass, constitution and by-laws,
Also Appointed
‘Miss Rosemary Kirkhoff, Mrs. Evan Van Meter and Mrs. Francke, Past Presidents’ Parley; Mesdames Desse ri. Meyers, Mar‘ha McCoy, Woodard and Miss Prisble, po) day; Mrs. Helen Munger, publicity and radio; Mrs. Lillian Acton and Mrs. Arata, rehabilitation and hose pital; Mrs. Marie O’Donohoe and Mrs. Minnie Burk, service sales; Mrs. Fern Owens, social; Mesdames Elsie Johnson, Kerrick, Hughes and DeWitt, unit activities; Mesdames Hughes, Sedberry and Irene Kise, welfare; Mrs. Pribble and Mrs. Nel lie Creech, Indianapolis Council of Women delegates.
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fashion repeats itself in this new Fall collection of Marott Challengers. Note especially the
simple, distinguished
Smart for Autumn-
AROTT'S
UNIVERSITY
ALLENGERS
e new softer, more casual trend in Autumn
Accents
lines, the subtle use of all trimming. The colors are subdued—soft green, warm brown and dusky black.
- We highlight four from the selection—true evidence that Marott Challengers are your best buy anywhere at the price.
