Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1942 — Page 13
' Homemaking—
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——
THE ARMY BOYS eat well. In fact, far better than a large proportion of our American citizenry. But the army diet doesn’t go in very heavily for sweets. Fruit cobbiers, rice pudding, banana pudding, ice cream, some cake and doughnuts are the usual desserts.
bo; The Boys at Camp Would Like A Box of Chocolate Chip Squares
Note—This letter is in reply to A. W. J., who complains about women’s liberties and independence and says they leave men hungry for love.
DEAR A. W. J—Shall I tell you
what men want most in life? They
pine for the good old days when a woman married and had 10 or 12 children and raised them on imagination. She worked in the fields, in the house, washed when her babies were three days gld and at 40 looked 100 years Old. She never had a new dress, but wore hand-me-downs. Oh, yes, the husband never lost his identity. He went to lodge, saloon or wine room, but mama stayed with the babies. When they were grown, mama was no longer useful, but was like the discarded furniture
.in the attic waiting for the junk
man.
How many men today can keep a wife on their salaries? Girls are
“Just as lovable now as ever, but they
do keep up a stiff front and use their heads. You speak of their liberties and independence. You don’t want love but submission to every whim and idle fancy of the little tin gods known as men. Be your age and quit snifling. You men made us women what we are by treating us as subjects.
I am a grandmother. Many ‘days
-X worked from 5 in the morning un-
til midnight. Believe me, I don't want my granddaughter to be a fool for any man, even if she does love him.—A. B. C.
Answer—You are too hard on men, just as our correspondent A.
'W. J.|is too hard on women. Each
of you have some right on your side, but out of the bitterness of personal experience you have generalized too freely, If A. W. J.’s letter showed antagonism against women, yours shows an equal antagonism against men, and neither attitude makes for a good adjustment in life, On your side, it is true that in pioneer times many women wore
themselves out in the fields and in
the home. They haven't entirely disappeared from the contemporary scene. But you overlook entirely the group of women who, then and now, have been protected and served by hard-working men. On A. W. J.’s side, there are women who have made their jobs too
“important in their urge to escape
oblivion in drudgery. They have carried their independence too far for their own happiness. A busi-
_hness career which excludes marriage is a fairly hollow success for most
women. In the end they come to hate their situation in life as much as the woman who sacrificed herself to the family. The woman with the best chance
of a satisfactory life is the one
who is able to compromise between the views which you two express. She does not hate men because they occupy the leading position in life, or try to smack them down by becoming a poor imitation of a man herself. She accepts the secondary role without resentment against men and without allowing herself to be ijnposed upon. She conceives of marriage as an equal partnership in which each has his own task to perform without envy of the other’s role. JANE JORDAN
If you plan to send your draftee son or husband, brother or hoyfriend a box of sweets, better make a batch of cookies. Chocolate is the most popular flavor with men. Select recipes that will produce good flavor, stay fresh a long time and be easy to pack. Here's one: CHOCOLATE CHIP SQUARES (20 Squares) One-half cup sifted flour, ¥% teaspoon combination baking powder, 1% teaspoon salt, %& cup sugar, 1 egg, well beaten, 1 teaspoon melted butter or other shortening, 2 teaspoons hot water, 2-3 cup broken nut meats, one 7-0z. package semisweet chocolate chips. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder and salt, and sift again, Add sugar gradually to egg, beating thoroughly. Add butter and water; chips, mixing thoroughly. Add flour gradually, mixing well. Turn mixture into 8 by 8 by 2-inch pan which has been greased, lined with waxed paper, and again greased. Bake in slow oven (350 degrees F.) 25 to 30 minutes. Cool. Remove from pan. Cut in squares.
2 8 2 Good Meals for Good Morale BREAKFAST: Grapefruit juice, scrambled eggs, wholewheat toast, jam, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Kidney beans and spaghetti, stewed dry fruit, tea, milk. DINNER: Beef patties with spring vegetable sauce, new potatoes, but-
tered asparagus, fresh fruit gelatin, program chairman. Mrs.
coffee, milk. 8 ” ”
Today's Recipe
KIDNEY BEANS AND SPAGHETTI S
Two cups spaghetti, 4 cups dried kidney beans, 6 tablespoons fat, 4 cups stewed tomatoes, 4 tablespoons salt, 6 tablespoons flour, % teaspoon
pepper. Wash and soak the beans over-
inch long and cook in boiling salted water until soft. Drain, Make a tomato sauce; melt the fat, add the flour, and cook until bubbling. Add the tomatoes and cook until thickened. Mix the spaghetti and beans together, add seasoning and sauce, and serve hot.
Win Awards in Art Contest
Times Special SOUTH BEND, Ind. April 27.— Students at Ladywood and St. Mary's academy in Indianapolis were awarded prizes in the annual state exhibit of Catholic school art at a recent preview held at St. Mary’s college, Notre Dame. Miss Dorothy Yegge, Ladywood, received first prize in design; Miss Therese Des Roche of St. Mary's academy received second prize in drawing and Miss Charlotte Heity, also of St. Mary’s, was awarded honorable mention in that same division, Honorable mention also was given Miss Eileen Beranisch, St. Mary’s, for her still life and the academy as a whole was awarded second prize for its sculpture work.
Judges were C. Warner William of Cuiver and James Cloethingh and Mrs. Gertrude Wiser Butcher, both of South Bend. Honorary guests at the preview were P. C. Reilly of Indianapolis and Mrs. C. B. King of Pasadena, Cal., for-
mer president of the Hoosier Salon Patrons’ association. :
then nuts and chocolate |:
night, add two teaspoonfuls of salt, and cook them until tender. Break the spaghetti into pieces about an
by the men’s and women’s clubs of
‘Mahoney and Mrs. James Clements
Assisting with plans for the Blossom Time dance, to be sponsored urday at the Indiana Roof, are (back row, left to right), Mrs, William
Paul Kernel and Mrs. Claude Rochford.
Our Lady of Lourdes church, Sat-
and (front row, left to right), Mrs.
19th Convention
of Women Voters have been issued
Haute May 13 and 14.
State League of Women Voters Issues Invitations for Its
Invitations to attend the 19th state convention of the Indiana League
of the Terre Haute league. The convention will be held in the new Student Union building of Indiana State Teachers’ college in Terre
Preliminary plans for the sessions have been announced by Mrs.
May 13-14
by Mrs. Charles Walker, president
Allan C. G. Mitchell, Bloomington, Robert Ryan, general chairman in charge of local arrangements at Terre Haute, will have as her committee members Mesdames Glen Wallenbrock, D. M. Ferguson, Glenn Irwin, E. L. Bland, Richard Young, C. N. Templeton, Harold P. Parker and Warner Throckmorton. The state convention will follow the national convention which opens tomorrow in Chicago and continues through Friday. Plans for Indiana's participation in the league’s wartime service program, as outlined at Chicago, will be elaborated at the Terre Haute meetings. Speakers for
be announced later. The sixth broadside, “Citizens on the Alert,” the last to be issued by the state league before its convention, has been djstributed by the state office. Like “Voting Is Especially Important in War Time,” an earlier broadside, the new one deals with the importance of voting and points out that honest elections are the basis of democracy.
Attending Convention
Representatives of the Indiana league at the national convention will include Mesdames James Moffat, William Mercille, Mitchell, S. T Burns, A. R. Lindesmith, A. J. Rogers and Jay Allen, Bloomington; Mesdames Clayton Root, Otto Fifield and Stanley Cox, Crown Point; Mesdames Robert White, Ted Plimpton and Charles Jordan, East Chicago; Mrs. C. T. Boynton, Elkhart. Mrs. R. W. Shirley, Evansville; J Mrs. Don Datisman and Mrs, Lewis Long, Gary; Mesdames Charles N. Teetor, Donald Teetor, Herman Teetor and Delbrook Lichtenberg, Hagerstown; Mesdames James Clancy, Roy Gibbons, J. W. Plewa, Glenn Peters, Richard Tinkham, J. W. Brown, A. C. Colby, Wasson Wilson, E. W. Taylor, A. O. Wooldridge and R. W. Kretsch and Dr. Hedwig S. Kuhn, Hammond; Mrs. H. C. Dorman, Hobart; Mrs. Helen Guy, Remington, Mesdames J. P. Pennell, Frank Pennell and David ‘Miller, Kokomo; Mrs. Russell Beck and Mrs. Hans Riemer, Michigan City; Mesdames
man Keyes and W. F. Nattkemper, Peru; Mesdames Howard Hammer, Fred Swope and Thomas Shumaker, Richmond; Mrs. Molly Donlin and Mrs. William Hilliker, Chesterton; Mrs. Robert Raudebaugh and Mrs. E. T. Stahl, Lafayette. Indianapolis league members attending will be Mesdames William Snethen, Clarence F. Merrell, Leonard A. Smith, Fred Bates Johnson, Arthur Medlicott, Walter S. Greenough, John Goodwin, Thomas D. Sheerin, S. N. Campbell, P. Newton Cook, Leo M. Gardner, Lester A. Smith, Don Carlos Hines, Irene C. Sweeney and Miss Mary
luncheon and dinner meetings will|™
{Girl Reserve Head
Richard Edwards, Joseph Shirk, Ly- |
Miss
Canteen Corps
Has 2 Classes
Two Red Cross classes to train volunteer canteen workers, who will
be assigned to work in a permanent Red Cross canteen and will be subject to emergency call in case of a disaster, are now meeting at the model kitchen of the Citizens’ Gas & Coke Utility. Mrs. Marshall Vegler is instructing a day class, which meets Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays for a period of six weeks, and Miss Rosemary Lodde is teaching the business girls’ night class, which is meeting on Wednesdays for a 20week period. Assistant instructors are Miss Marian Schleicher and Mrs. Helen Stokes. A third class will be started June 1, according to Mrs. Lewis E. Gausepohl, volunteer chairman of the canteen corps. Mrs. Gausepohl will interview and register applicants for the new course each Tuesday between 10:30 a. m. and 4 p. m. at Red Cross headquarters in the Chamber of Commerce building.
Will Visit Here
Miss Ying Yi Lin, Girl Reserve secretary of the National Y. W. C, A. of China, will be a guest this week of the Central Y. W. C. A. and the} Girl Reserve department under the direction of Miss Malvin Morton and Miss Margery Dudley, assistant. Miss Lin will be here from tomorrow through Saturday. She arrived in this country last fall to do special study in George Williams college, Chicago. She has completed her work and is on a tour of the United’ States before returning to China for active duty. Tomorrow afternoon the Advisers’ council will meet with her in the Girl Reserve office for an informal tea. On Saturday morning the two
hold a special meeting to discuss youth problems.’ Miss Lin also will attend a Y¥. W. C. A. directors’ meeting tomorrow night; will visit a nutrition class tomorrow morning at 11 o’clock followed by a luncheon with the health education department and will visit a Girl Reserves’ mother-daughter tea at school 18 Thursday afternoon. She also will take part in an impromptu forum with the Girl Reserve club at school 10 Wednesday.
Will Fete Mothers
The semi-monthly meeting of the C. go. club will be held tonight at the home of Miss Marian Scott. Plans will be made for a dinner
Sinclair.
honoring members’ mothers.
Safeguard
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State E. P . WwW. Session to Be Held May 15
Times Special 3 FRENCH LICK SPRINGS, Ind, April 27—Plans were formulated today for the 25th annual convention of the Indiana Business and Professional Women’s club to be held here May 15 through 17. More than 700 business and professional women from 98 communities will attend. The program for the three-day meeting was drawn up by officers
of the group: Dr. Bonnell Souder, Auburn, president; Mrs. Susannah Fonner, Ft. Wayne, vice president; Miss Ona Mabel Kell, Princeton, second ‘vice president; Mrs. Bess Callahan, Terre Haute, recording secretary; Miss Lilah Gilbert, Garrett; Mrs. Edna Mayhak, Gary; and Mrs. Lottie Kirby, Bloomington, members at large. “Women’s Place in the World of Today” will be the theme of the convention with addresses scheduled to be made by Margaret A. Hickey, St. Louis, first vice president of the national federation; Mrs. Melanie F. Menderson, Cincinnati; Mary Sue Wigley, Dawson, Ala.; Toni Sender, New York, and others. Sara L. Buchanan, assistant in legal research of the U. S. department of labor, will give the principal speech Saturday afternoon, May 16 —“Woman’s Responsibility for Laws.” The Ada Frost attendance award will be given the club having the highest percentage of members registered at the convention and other awards will be given for the most outstanding original music and song and to the club returning the highest number of report blanks. Among subjects to be discussed will be “Strengthening Democracy for Defense” and other war time problems. Convention highlight will be a banquet May 16 with Miss Wigley delivering an address on “Making a Living and Living a Life.”
Wrapover Frock
Er —
8164
Here’s the most comforting home
Girl Reserve inter-club councils will|{fashion to have been invented in years—the coat style wrap-around.|p.
Slip into it, fasten two buttons and in two seconds you are dressed— ready for any home task. No pulling it on over the head and mussing your hair-do. Pattern 8164 is designed for sizes 32 to 46. Size 34 with bias skirt takes 4% yards 35-inch material. 2 yards ric rac.
For this attractive pattern, send 15 cents in coin, your name, address, pattern number and size to The Times Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st. Ready now! A new fashion book for summer. Brimming over with ideas for cool clothes for yourself and all your familly. All sizes from 1 to,52. Send for your copy today. Pattern 15 cents, pattern book 15 cents, one pattern and pattern book ordered together 25 cents. Enclose 1 cent postage for each pattern.
To Sew for Red Cross
An all-day meeting to sew for the Red Cross will be held tomorrow by the Mothers’ club of the English Avenue Boys’ club at the clubhouse, 1400 English ave.
whe,
TRY) SII
ON
TONIGHT 7:00—~Vox Pop, WFBM. 7:00—Cavalcade of WIRE. 8:00—Radio Theater, WFBM. 8 MUTUAL'S “Spotlight Ban broadcast goes into the home stretch this week. The popular six-night-a-week program, which has brought some of the best dance bands in the nation to radio listeners, bows out Saturday night with the presentation of the “silver platter” winner for the week. . Here's the final lineup, which will take the program down across the border into Mexico City for the second successive week: Horace Heidt, tonight; Claude Thornhill, tomorrow; the Dominguez Brothers from Mexico, Wednesday; Benny Goodman, Thursday, and Charlie Spivak, Friday. The broadcasts are on WIBC each night at 8:30 o'clock.
America,
2 nn
THE BOYS ON THE fighting line will ‘have an opportunity to hear how the girl friends back home are handling the home front through the medium of “Your Blind Date” . program, which bows in ' as a; transcontinental feature on WISH tonight at 8:30 o'clock. Little Connie Haines, t he pert vocalist who sang with Tommy Dorsey for six years, will be the song- Miss Haines stress for the show. Frances Scully is mistress-of-ceremonies and Tizzie Lish is the program’s comedienne. Music will be provided by the Melodates, a 13-piece orchestra. One of the highlight’s of the program each week will be the intro- ? =
»| Theater” series on W
THIS EVENING =
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for inaccurancies in program announcements cd by station changes iter Dress time Tw
I
n’s mother to her son
duction of a service mas who will read a lette] over the air. ” on A LONG SEARCH for the clue to happiness is told on the “Radio BM at 8 o'clock tonight when Cecil B. DeMille presents. Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Taylor in “Penny j Serenade.” It is an adaptation of the motion picture of the same name. Loretta Young portrays the role of Molly Pitcher tonight in a “Cav- : alcade of Amer- Miss Stanwyck ica” dramatization, “This Side of Hades.” The drama tells the bor of Molly Hays, wife of a Carlisle, Pa., barber. who in her worry over her husband and Washington’s troops, picked up a musket and trudged off to Valley Forge. a # & A SERIES OF programs which will bring radio listeners the world’s foremost musical artists will ‘be
[launched on the “Telephone Hour”
tonight when that program begins its third year on WIRE and the Red
: [network at 8 o'clock.
Violinist Jascha Heifetz will be heard for five programs as the first guest on the series. , Successive weeks will bring such names as Grace Moore, Lawrence Tibbett, Jose Iturbi, John Charles Thomas, Lily Pons, Helen Jepson, Charles Kullman, James Melton, Lansing Hatfield, etc. 3 ” ” »
WIBC WILL CARRY two broad-
annual convention of the U. 8. chamber of commerce in Chicago. Barclay Anderson, roving editor »
casts this week from the 30th}
WFBM 1260 WIBC 1070 (CBS) (Mutual)
a sah.
00 Are U a Genjus 30 ER, ki a3eba a Sua Request mnie Request
Prayer News Sportsman’s
53|585s
WISH (Blue Retwork)
Bovero Music Bovero ag Home Merry-Go-Round
School Days y oe Bethencourt
WIRE 1 NBO-Red) Gir ySaries Por
Tro ey Tim U. 8. Navy
a Byrd 10-2-4 Ranch Star Parade
Fe) =]
Jack Armstrong Capt. Midnigh
Fulton 320s Jr. Canitol itol a rs apitol Ca Gapital apers,
5 Gilbert Forbes Amos and Aody
Modern Be al Modern Music
BEL
Dick Reed
Fred Waring World News Frankie Parrish Ralph Knox, News
B Seball Scores
Jimmie Fidler Captain Industry
News Luke Walton
Vox Pop Vox Pop gay Nineties
S Ee 5858
Gay Nineties
Cal Tinney Red Cross For America For America
Cavalcade Cavalcade Firestone Firestone
A| Mystery A Myster alse True or False
Charlie Cook ' One For Book Spotlight Bands Meade's Children
Telephone Hour Lelebnone Hour
pr. L
News—Music
C Blind Date Blind Date
y Martin : yr Martin 9:45 Blondie
John Gunther
30th C of C Meet
Contented Contented Thru The Log Thru The Log
For America For America Lum & Abner 5-Star Final
10: :00 Gilbert Forbes
10: ‘45 Sandman
11:00 Jerry Wald 11:15 Jerry Wald 11:00 Howard Wood 11:45 Howard Wood
Concert Rhvthms gohnny Gilbert Radio Newsreel Radio Newsreel
Dick Reed U. 8
. 8. Mi Starlig Starlight Trail
Coal Facts
i a oe anda fe Program
Ted Weems No Hitler Bus Woody Herman Woody Herman
Music You Want Music You Want
Music You Want News
nny Dunham ny Dunham
i Franklin
TUESDAY
PROGRAMS
WFBM 1260 (CBS)
WIBC 1070 (Mutual)
WIRE 1430 (NBC-Red)
| WISH 1310 (Blue Network)
6:30 Early Birds 6:45 Early Birds
Bill Hale Cousin Chickie
Dawn Patrol Dawn Patrol
Pioneer Sons Morning Mail
7:00 Early Birds 7:15 Karly Birds 7:30 Early Birds :45 News
Get Up & Go Get Up & Go Get Up & Go Get Up & Go
lorning rning M orning M
News
World Toda Mrs. FPFarre Mrs. Farrell
15 :30 :45 Harvey-Dell
PO © cne® =3-3 53 ug gs 29 en no 5 [= <
: 30 Sie pimother
ay’'s Band
News Roundup Haymakers Bandwagon Devotional
Buy Bonds Today Buy Bonds Today Friendly House friendly House
Musical Clock New!
Shol ing School Shopping School
Bess Johnson Bachelor's Child Helpmate Mary Marlin
Brea Brea, rea Brea
New Xi vier Cug ‘omen in 8 Be tense Just Relax
= — L. Taylor 10:15 Brush Creek
Friendly House Priendly House
Bartons
cond Husband neymoon Hil
. Tun® Re 1 t Gilbert Forbes
10:30 Bright Horizon 10:45 Aunt Jenny
11:00 Kate Smith 11: 35 3 Ble Sister 11:30 He ent lv ” Gal 1" Bunday
Public Schools Bailey-Arthur
Date With cornhuskers Haymakers Hi Sailor
Mid Da
12:30 Farm Circle F 8 12:45 Farm Circle s
John's Wife Just Pla in Bill
Keyboard Rhythms ket Re Farm and Home Farm and Home
News ple’s Man Drug Program Drug Program
ad o @ David Harum Singin’ Sam Serenade Lone Journey Eatatorially Livestoc!
k Farm and Home Wally Nehrling Dick Reed
:00 Dr, Malone News Picture Buy Bonds Today Buy Bonds Todav
and Learn :45 Woman in White | Old-Time Jamboree
Frankie Parrish Linda's Love ts in ort rmony
Editors Daughter
U. 8. Army It's Dance Y ime Market Summary
Hollywood News
Baseball Baseball Baseball Baseball
scott Presents B Os LON esents Day Dreams
ainst Storm aw Perkins Pepper Young Happiness
Baseball Base ball
Baseball Basebal
Je Woe am Songs by Trial News
Backstage Wife Stella las Lorenzo Jones Widder Brown
Girl Marries Portia
pngs by Sonia
CI C C! C ones by Sonia
rry-Go-Round rry-Go-Round
Cancer Control DePauw U.
WLW MONDAY
PROGRAMS |
M. 6:00—Fred Was 4:00--QGirl Marries 6:15—Gregor : 15-=Po0! 3 4:30—~-The 4: 48 Beautiful E¥ Bh ore: 7:3
.8:3 “48— Low, ell Tho 8:45—Dr.
:30—Sunset Melodies 6:45—Burt Farber 10: 1: $0-Cayalcade 10:1 0-—Voice of Firestone 8: 20 Tespuone Hour
ng 3:00 Con tented 0-—-Hilights & Shadows 9: ASH hts & Shadows 00==J
a 8—Gregor 2 Ziemer 10:30—Dek! ke Moist
10:45—Bu 11: Be Moore 11:15—Deacon Moore 11:30—Moon River
TUESDAY PROGRAMS
:30—-N 6: 45 Manstield- Abbott 7:00=T1im 8hin
x 18— Carroll ¢ oO. Alcott :30—Parade of Stars 7 :45—Consumer
8:00—Aunt Jenn 3:1 Linda's Tove
1:00-—-Editor‘s 11:15-—Lone Jou
hE 2:15—Ev 12:30] 13:45— Ls 1,15-Grimm’s
Hearts
: ee ver 9:45—-Mary Marlin
10: :00—The ba Baltons
H: :30—News-Farm 1:45--Livestock
e! body's Form Big "Bister
in 10g Lin of Worl 3 Dau
L :30—-Guidi ht gud TE
rum Daughter ourney
i
Reports
Seis if
$30
Goldbergs 4: Hi!
Harmony rid & Sade
Sponsor Card Party
Sponsors for a card party to be held in the pirish hall of St. George's Episcopal church at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow will be Mrs. Eddie Eberhardt, Miss Margaret Eberhardt and Mrs. Edna Baker.
TRIUMPH OIL-INFUSED PERMANENT
O-Infused %r$0.25
your eyes! Complete with sham{poo and styled Reg. $3.50 wave
THE RADIO TONIGHT
for “Reader’s Digest,” is scheduled to ‘speak tonight at 9:30 o'clock. Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker will address the organization tomorrow night pn “How to Win the War.”
oo
BOX SEATS STILL AVAILABLE
INDIANA'S GRAND I 125 PIANO i FESTIVAL Sunday Afternoon and Evening I COLISEUM
STATE FAIR GROUNDS BOX SEATS $1.10
Call | Tres
LI-6464
* kkk x hk *
|| TONIGHT “THE TELEPHONE HOUR”
INAUGURATES A GREAT ARTISTS SERIES WITH
JASCHA HEIFETZ
AND THE BELL SYMPHONIC ORCHESTRA
IY CLEANSER Solitons [01 TS Rl
“IMPORTANT VITAMINS”
Your gas range is ideally Sujted to modern “waterless cooking” which saves vegetable vitamins and minerals. Because of its flexibility you can regulate the heat to any degree you need.
So ise your gas range wisely— and follow these simple rules for food that is really health-giving:
® Cook vegetables in as small an amount of water as possible:
‘ Being so fo boiling point quickly over high gas flame. © When boiling begins, turn gas flame down and boil Ee '@ Use covered utensils to keep steam in. : € Do not use soda, as it destroys vegetable vitamins. :
© Cook ve les as short a time
as possible. ¢ Serve foods soon after cooking:
CITIZENS GAS and COKE UTILITY,
INSURED SAFETY
for your furs in Our Modern
FUR STORAGE
We INSURE all garments stored in OUR OWN modern cedar lined storage vaults. This means CERTAIN SAFETY.
for your furs.
CLEANING
Fur garments carefully cleaned by approved FURRIER'S METHOD . . |. NOT d cleaned. Linings removed cleaned and replaced.
ALL OUR SALESMEN ARE BONDED
LUX
The Aristocrat of
8
For NIN and 8 ra eee RHONE
