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G. O. P. WORKERS MEET HARDING First Steps Taken in ‘Front Porch’ Campaign. MARION, 0., July 9.—Conferences opened today at the Harding headquar ters are expected to shape the early ■work of the republican national cam paign. National Chairman Will H. Hays and Harry M. Daugherty, pre-convention man ager for Harding, came to discuss general campaign matters with Senator Harding. T. Coleman Dupont, national commit teemens from Delaware, chairman of a special committee to arrange the notifica tion ceremonies, is expected here to per fect plans for the reception of the re publican party leads who are to inau gurate the ‘‘front porch” campaign. Senator Albert B. Cummins of lowa will arrive Saturday to present to Sen to Harding campaign suggestions born of the experienced bad by Senator Cum mins in his hard fight in lowa for re nomination for the senate. Gen. Leonard Wood is coming to con sult with Senator Harding on methods to swing to the Harding-Coolidge ticket of strength developed by and for Gen. Wood. Pennsy Will Award Medals to Employes RICHMOND, Ind., July 9.—A. C. Wat son, superintendent of the Richmond di vision of the Pennsylvania railroad, has announced that medals will be awarded to ail employes and officer's who aerved in the world war. This action is taken, the company says, as an apppreclation of the credit re flected on the company and in memory of the services rendered by its officers and employes who fonght for the United States in the great struggle. About 125 men in this division, which operates between Logansport and Cin cinnati, will receive medals. Franklin College Adds 2 to Faculty FRANKLIN, Ind., July 9.—Miss Caddie A. Griffith and Dr. Lynn H. Harris have been added to the Franklin college fac ulty. Miss Griffith is tha new dean of wom en and assistant professor in English snd Dr. Harris becomes the head of the Eng lish department. Miss Griffith is a graduate of Findlay college, Findlay, 0., and received her A. M. degree at the University of Chi cago. Dr Harris is a graduate of Dickinson college. Pa., and a graduate of Yale with a degree of Ph.D. Monon Conductor Dies at Lafayette LAFAYETTE, Ind., July 9.—'Matthew L. Rea, one of the best known con ductors on the Monon railroad is dead here at the St. Elizabeth hospital. He waa known as ‘Buster Rea” and had been employed as a conductor for eighteen yea;s. Rea was a thirty-second decree Mason belonging to the Scottish Rite at Indi anapolis. He also was a member of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, Or der of Railway Conductors and the Tribe of Ben Hur. Saves Work and Worrij in iiie Kitchen CRISPO cakes, cookies, wafers and biscuits are always ready to serve. They are , delightful to serve pany— to children. ' j i —ji i Crispo products I I I are pure, dainty, i tasty and whole- A supply of /tl & Crispo products II y in your home \ save work and worry in the GET CRISPO AT YOUR GROCER’S How to Instantly Have A Beautitul White Skin A Frto Prescription Does This for Ton. Ton Cnn Prepare It at Toor Borne. New York—lt Is my own discovery and It takes just one application to get anch marvelous results, says Mae Edna Wilder, when her friends ask her about her wonderful white skin and the im proved appearance of her hands and arms. You can do the same thing it you follow my advice, she says. I feel ft my duty to tell every girl or woman what this remarkable prescription did for me. Just think of it. All this change lu a single application. I never tire or telling others just what brought aboci such remarkable results. Here Is the identical formula that whitened my skin and removed every defect from my face, neck, hands and arms. Until you try It you can form no Idea of the marvelous change It will make. The prescription, which you can prepare at your own home Is as follows: Go to any grocery and get 10 cents worth of ordinary oat meal, and from any department or drug store a bottle of Der-wlllo. Prepare and nse as directed la every package of DERWILLO Before applying DerwlUo cleanse the skin thoroughly with a good cleansing cream. (Llska cold cream I have found Cos be the beat.) The Orat application Former Ft. Wayne Teacher Is Now Only Woman Billboard Designer Still Curosity Even in Her Own Firm, Where She Is Brought Forward Just Like Exhibit. A generation ago women dabbled in art. Girls who went to finishing school painted china, stenciled pillows and cur tains, and went into the woods to sketch once in a while. Today woman is a very definite and potont factor in me worm of art. Woman is entering every branch of art work that man has entered. There are women photographers, land scape gardeners, architects, Bketch artists, fashion designers as well as the portrait painters and scenic artists. Miss Sara H. Seymour has gone a step farther. She has entered/the field of commercial art as a designer aT billboard and other kind* of out-of-door advertising. Miss Seymour is the only woman in the country doing that special kind of art work. She is a curiosity even in her own firm, which is perhaps the largest sign company in the world. Miss Seymour says that when their men come in from branch offices they say, “I hear yon have a woman here.” Then she Is brought forward and she feels like an exhibit of some kind. She is a petite person with soft brown hair and delicate coloring and it is very hard to picture her as the designer and often the creator of glaring billboard advertising. She is a graduate of Columbia Univer sity. where she studied under Arthur Dow. __ After two years of teaching at Den nison university and Ft. Wayne, Ind., she entered the commercial advertising field. “I never knew what fascinating work advertising, particularly out-of-door ad vertising, might be,” she said when ques tioned about her entrance into the work. “I think there is so much room for improvement in the field of commercial art that any woman of talent may en gage in this work without danger of lessening her appreciation of the best in art. “I always wanted to do fashion de- Contributions Steady to Salvation Army Financial contributions received at headquarters of the Salvation Army home service appeal today ranged from $2 to SSO and the mails brought many re sponses. Employes qf the C., I. & W. railroad offices took a collection tor the fund amounting to $49. Fairbanks, Morse & Cos. are SSO con tributors. Money was also received from K. H. Lossy, Myers, Gates & Ralston, James S. Cruse Realty Company. James K. Roberts, Plnkus, Mills & Pinkus; Bert A. Boyd, Hugh J. Baker Company, Indian apolis Musicians’ Protective association, L. A. Mansfield, Campbell Oil Company, W. H. Holmes. Cora L. Epps, Fred J. Appel, State Loan Company, Edgar H. Evans, Sam Rubens and J. C. Perry. will astonish you. It makes the skin appear white, transparent, smooth and velvety. I especially recommend St for freckles, tan, sun spots, coarse pore* dark, sallow, rough skin, ruddiness, wrinkles, and In fact, every blemish the face, neck, hands acid arms are heir to. If your neck is dark one apolication of this combination will make 'it look as white as a lily. It is absolutely harm less and will not produce or stimulate a growth of hair. Since short sleeves are In vogue It Is necessary to have beautiful hands and arms, and no mat ter how rouga and ungainly they may be or what abuses they have had through hard work and exposure to the sun and wind, this prescription will work a won derful transformation. Thousands who are using it have had the same results as I have had. NOTE!—To get the best effect be sure to follow the complete directions con tained In every package of DERWILLO and it is so simple that anyone can use it, and so inexpensive that any gin or woman can afford It. Department stores uud druggists guarantee that there will be a noticeable Improvement after the ttrst application or they will refund the money. It is sold'in this city at all toilet counters uuci~r a mosey refund guarantee, including the Hook and the Haag drug companies Advertisement. MISS SARAH 111 : SEYMOUR. signing, but I find that in my out-of door advertising work I have so much more scope, always something new and different and always a chance to work in color which I love.” Miss Seymour finds it hard to explain her work to the layman, but the matn feature is that her drawings are all made on a scale. Her small piece of drawing paper is laid out in tiny squares anti the huge steel billboards are laid out in large squares. She makes her drawing or design for an automobile, toothpaste, or soft drink advertisement and then the sign painters take it and copy it on the steel board. They paint whatever she has in a tiny square into the corresponding big square on the board. Miss Seymour is a native of Nejvark, Ohio. At present she is working in the Cleve land branch of the world's largest sign company. Hamilton County Farmer Drops Dead NOBLESVILLE, Ind., July o.—George Sheets, 77, is dead here today from heart disease. He was assisting his wife in driving some chickens to shelter before a rain and was climbing a fence when he fell to the ground. When his wife reached him he was dead. Mr. Sheets served four years in the Civil war and was one of the wealthy farmers of Hamilton county. Here They Go! The Best $7.00 / J b Values You’ve J|J Seen In Town This Year-Now itvL * 4 -4s, IM ■ oxfords that you have seen this season. effects—right up to the minute. Absolutely $4.48 is what we are actually going to sell them at beginning tomorrow morning at 8:00. Don’t miss this I Here’s a Hummer Genuine $8 and $9 value \ ‘English" and Blucher Mahog- Ay j any Cordo Oxfords, also fine, soft vici kid, in every popular , /TdtifrZ last. The real custom bench // s made article—long wearing, 1 comfortable and the last word in /> i style. All sizes. While they ! Ilast, $5.08. ®TUiMr6 Sfioe Ste&Cct F Uargaat Sho* Retailer* in the World— 3oo Store* in 100 Cities 7 North Pennsylvania, Odd Fellow Bldg. _u 164 North Illinois Street INDIANA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1920. Kokomo Man Killed by Electric Shock KOKOMO, Ind., July 9.—No relative or friend has appeared at the undertaking parlors to order the funeral and burial of George Brandon, 39. who was electro cuted Wednesday while climbing an elec tric light post in front of the residence of Mrs. Pearl Tharp, where he was a roomer. He made the climb for the amusement of the women of the household and came to his death by hanging on to a ground wire which the weight of his body pressed against a wire carry 1,100 volts of electricity. Brandon apparently has no frineds who are able or willing to pay his fu neral expenses. Out of Wife’s Arms Right Into Sheriff’s COLUMBUS. Ind., July 9.—Herbert Fishel, a wealthy and well-known resi dent of Hope, for whom Sheriff Essex had been searching for several days, walked into the sheriff's office Thurs day and was Immediately placed under arrest, on a charge <>f wife desertion. Fishel was not aware that a warrant had been issued for bin). He was released on bond of $2,500. SAY “DIAMOND DYES” )on t streak or ruin your material in a >oor dye. Insist on “Diamond Dyes. £asy directions in package. “FREEZONE” jft Off Corns! No Painl Doesn’t hurt a bit: Drop a little Freexone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with Ungers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between'the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation.—Adver tisement. Askin cMarine Cq A riL 127 West Washington N. H. LEIBSON, Manager. Will Do ~~store~ciosed~ The Better Place and Better Way Friday P. M. To Buy Clothes During the summer months we close at noon An entire building devoted exclusively to the outfitting on Friday, in order to of men, women and children. Newly furnished through give our employes a out, and full of tlie values in wearing apparel to ... ... be found anywhere. A better place for you to trade wee y a 01 ay * than the so-called cash or thirty-day stores, because you Open Saturday until 9 m ay buy for cash or oil payments, as you desire. And p. m. to accommodate so much better than the old-fashioned credit store that our customers. there is no comparison. A beautiful shop with a service you will appreciate. „ __ Ladies 9 Coats and Suits Jl/2 Off : 'lgffifl) Every spring suit and coat in the ladies’ section is / lj|aß§ reduced exactly one-half for this occasion. Here SIB.OO garments now. ~59.00 $44.75 garments n0w., 522.50 W ! gjjjj£ W/f $29.50 garments n0w.. 514.98 $59.50 garments n0w..529.50 \V‘ ' 4 y Clearance of Beautiful Summer Millinery Summer Dresses All hats formerly selling as high as \/j ~ ' 4? ‘*3 £f l $6.00 are on sale in this <£ .95 r is®'*’ AJ ’’ CfX millinery clearance at “ I j_ j WfZ'/ r the special price of— * X \ J/ J . _ “ _ — r il -.1 n /V \ j) J\ A collection of charming sunjmer ‘ speeia P { V Ji ) dresses of beautiful washable ma-' ■■■ ■ —a newly received ship- y terials, including plain and figured ment of beautifully voiles and organdies. Unusually fine trimmed hats of fine milan and leghorn. dresses for such a low price. New Arrivals of Fine Lingerie The fine undergarments in silk and satin materials offered at the GST* u Nv very special prices quoted here have just come in from New L \ / H York. They must be seen to be appreciated. Beautijnl Satin Camisoles , $1.39 j |( /f Crepe de Chine Combinations , $2.98 ' _/ Crepe de Chine and Satin Gowns, $6.98 AA White and Pink Satin Petticoats , $6.98 Crepe de Chine Bloomers $3.98 Choice of Entire Stock of Men’s Suits Men’s Now I/S Off Men’s J Jj Even the very fine blue serge garments usually withheld from such a sale are cut exactly one-fifth the former rir* price. The only exceptions are to he found in the fol- £ J[ rOUSCrS lowing caße where even more drastic reductions prevail— V^XYOTCIS Those that were made to sell as .gx*. /v /v .... „ „...... ■— Q ne Special Lot of SO.OO *3£s Men’s Suits Those that were made to sell np These well-known oxfords are to SB.OO are now priced at *P M Jl® • i offered in both black and tan. smd QC The shoes offered are new stock, stylish lasts and very _____ f ar a8 values for the money go, these are the pick of high grade. . the sale. Some sold formerly as high as $45.00. Askin CMarine Cos. 127 West Washington . N. H. LEIBSON, Manager. 9