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MORE PLAY LOTS NEXT YEAR, PLAN ■ Recreation Director Addresses Lenox Improvement Club. 11. Walter Jarvis, director of the recre ation department of the city park board, was the speaker at the meeting of the I.enox Improvement dab, at 2602 Norik LaSalle street, last night. Mr. Jarvis told of the work of the department, saying there are thirty-eight nay grounds in operation in the rltj this year and that the department . planned more playgrounds for year. “More than Lvio business and proses jflonal men, mechanics and laborers take ftrt in the horseshoe league games lti tjte city playgrounds every week,” ho * wtd. f- “The department offers not only ath letic events to the citizens of the city l>ot free, concerts by the leading bands, free educational moving picture shows and entertainment for both children and grownups.’’ Jarvis said rowdyism gradually had been done away with ut the playgrounds • and the matrons and directors make them safe for children. Society Members of the Gamma Beta sorority entertained today with a luncheon at the Bamboo Inn. followed by a theater party at the Murat in honor of Miss Kath erine Larkin. Mrs. Eleanor Ford, president of the organization, was in charge of arrange ments. • s Mr. and Mrs. George and Mrs. Louis Kern, Forty-second street and Arling ton avenue, left today for Wowatum Beach. Mich., where they will spend the remainder of the summer. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Harry Burnet, 1864 North Pennsylvania street, have gone to Hawks park, Fla. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fletcher Smith of Franklin announce the marriage of their daughter. Miss Minerva Smith, to Herbert Cameron Blandford of Indian apolis. which took place July 2. Mr. and Mrs. Blandford will be at home after Sept. 1 at 2808 Buckle street. • * * Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Johnstone of Ot tumwa, la., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Melvillel Henderson. • • • Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Patterson of Chi cago announce the engagement of their daughter Florence to Charles R. James, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. J. James. 41 Whittier place. The wedding will take place Sept. 8 at tbe home of the bride’s parents. m m m Mrs. T. C. Hill. 529 East Fifteenth street, will leave tonight for Mobile and Vaverland, Ala., to spend a month. Mrs. D. V. Ring, 31 Bancroft avenue, will be the hostess at the “box lunch party" to be given by the women of the Gatling Gun club Friday night. Mrs. Elizabeth Hiatt Gregory of New York City, who has been the_ house guest of her sister. Mrs. S. C. Klnnaird. li l *.* East drive Woodruff Place, has returned to her home. • * * Mrs. W. E. Wisner and Mrs. Mary Hines of Columbus are the guests _ of Mrs. Arthur B. Carr, 1927 North New Jersev street. • • • Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Welch, 1027 North Dearborn street, and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Welch have returned from a trip through, the west. • • • The engagement is announced of Miss Gertrude Louise Meisenhelder, daughter o r'Mrs. Ida Meisenhelder, 320 Layman arenue, to L. Russell Newgent of Green castle. Meetings The Holy Rosary Altar society will give an open air card party Thursday afternoon, on the school grounds. 533 T Stevens street, for the benefit of the church. The regular weekly meeting of the dis cussion group of the All Souls Unitarian church will be held tonight on the lawn of the church. Dr F. S. C. Wicks will review Owen V. liter's “A Straight Deal, or the Aucfeul Grudge.” Members of the Holy Innocents Epis copal church will give an ice cream social tomorrow night at the pariah house. Sen. Harding’s Father Married by Dinsmore Dr. C. M. Dinsmore, superintendent of the Indiana Baptist convention, has that he married Dr. George -xr. Harding, father of the republican nominee for president, and Miss Endora Luvlsi In Anderson, In 1911. Dr. Dinsmore said Dr. Harding and Miss Luvlsi, who was a nurse, arrived In Anderson two days before the cere mony. Miss Lnvlsi went to the home of rela tives. The couple left Anderson Immediately following the ceremony. Dr. Dinsmore said. Dr. Dinsmore said the couple came to Anderson supposedly because members of the Harding family objected to the marriage. Dr. Harding gave his age as 67 and Miss Lnvisl's as 43. The first wife of Dr. Harding had died a year previous to his second marriage. Street Car Service Is Asked by Elwood Special to The Times. ELWOOD. Ind., July 21. —A hearing of the petition of this city for the re sumption t.f street car service by the Indiana Union Traction Company will be held Aug. 2, and if the efforts being made by the city council are successful, the hearing will be held in this city. During the coal shortage last winter the street cars used for local service •were taken off and only the traction care running through Elwood remained. Since then several petitions have been sent to the traction officials and the latest one was sent to the public serv ice commission. Thera have been few problems that have so stirred the city and the de mand that street cars run again In El wood is a strong one. Real Estate Board to Plan Convention A special meeting of the board of gov ernors of tbe Indiana Real Estate as sociation was to be held this afternoon at the Chamber of Commerce, and plans for the state convention to be held at Mancie. Octo. 12, 13 and 14, were to be discussed. Tentative plans that have been made by Mancie for tbe entertainment of the visi tors were to be outlined by Roy M. rriedley, president of tbe Muncie Real Estate Board. No Oae Need Buy Guticura Before He Tries Free Samples Sop, Ointment, Ttlnnn. 25e. liurthm Sample* fro* of Oausarm LabarMarlaa, Dap*. X, KaUaOfaas. Would Make Market of Car Barns I . . ' y.-ry V •- ' . •• Old Shelby street mule car barns which may be converted into a market house. Indianapolis may nave another munici pal market house if plans of the South Side Women's club and some of the mem bers of the city council are carried out. The club has asked the board of public safety and the council to establish the market at the old mule car barns. LOCAL WOMEN GO TO CONVENTION Altrusa Club Holds Annual Gathering in Chicago. A number of Indianapolis women will attend the third convention of the Na tional Association of Aitrusa clubs, which will be held at the Congress hotel in Chi cago the last of this week. Among those who will go are Dr. Mary Westfall, president of the local chapter; Miss Mamie L. Bass. Miss Jocelyn Court right. Miss Lulie Gibbons. M;ss Katherine Gibbons, Miss Leona Rutledge. Miss Charlotte Carter. Mias Maude MeVicker, Miss Mary Davis. Mrs. Ida Belser, Mrs. Fannie S. Sweeney, Miss Helen S. Clay ton. Miss Mary Buehler, Miss Jean White man, Mrs. Martha Abel, Mrs. Pearl Clarke, Miss Ada B. Robinson, Mrs. Georgiannn Weber, Miss Mabel Stamper and Miss May Foley. The Altrusa club Is an organization made up of business and professional women from different lines of work, sim •ilar in purpose and policy to the Rotary. Kiwanis and Optimist clubs, of the men. Four years ago in Nashville. Tenn., the first chapter of Altrusa was organized, but the national organization was formed in this city by three local women, Misses Lnella Mercer, Morna Hickman ana Mamie L. Bass. Miss Bass served as first national presi dent, Miss Mercer as first treasurer and Miss Hickman as secretary. At present Miss Bessie D. Moore, an attorney of Dayton, 0., is president, and Miss Bass is secretary. The convention committee, composed of Phoenix Pork Beans I Scientists have proved that there is an unusual amount of nutrition stored up in But they have also proved that it takes jl| superb skill in cooking to enable the 4*? human body to assimilate that nutrition. jS>-\ Phoenix Pork and Beans are correctly |||t Asa consequence, you have in Phoenix : ij Pork and Beans a food that is not only ap- jlliiftfir /afiCAs! predated for its flavor—but that is excop- /AHP tionally high in nutritive values. 4^B Our special processes have been per fected over a long period of years. They are scientifically accurate—for a fz“\%dZ n t- n %Zt"dpu^ti (degree either of undercooking or of over- rhJSu'cmSH 7mm SSSSi 7. cooking would impair the result. But'”.’HoZni! vffia' Include Phoenix Pork and Beans in * 11 your menu. Get a can today. Your family will appreciate them. | SCHNULL & COMPANY, Indianapolis | The council will take up the question in the near future. The barns, which are now used by the city street cleaning department, housed i a market twenty years ago. The women also plan an out-of-door i market in Fountain square. | prominent Chicago business women, are making Interesting plans for the enter : talnment of the guests. MARRIED WOMEN SENT TO SCHOOL Detroiter Holds All Under 16 Must Attend Grades. DETROIT, July 21.— Twenty-six Detroit married women, all under tho age of 16, must attend the grade schools under the state compulsory education law, according to rulings made here by Arthur L. Lederle, chief attendance officer of the board of ed ucation, and Judge Henry S. Hulbert of the probate court. A state law passed in 1916 releases a minor at marriage from parental control end provides that such minors "shall be entitled to the same rights, benefits and privileges and such minors shall be subject to the same duties, liabilities and responsi bilities as such husband or wife as if they were of legal age at tbe time of their marriage.’’ Fpon this section of tbe statutes attorneys for Agnes Bauer, 16-year- I old bride, are bnslifg their appeal to the courts to upset the school order. Lands in Main Street KALIRPELL, Mont.. July 21 --Piloting “The Vamp. ' his pet plane. N. H. Matner, Fnited States Aircraft corporation, land ed and took off from Kallspell’s main street here. INDIANA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1920. WHEN A GIRL MARRIES A New Serial of Young Married Life By ANN LISLE.- CHATTER LXLV. Sheldon’s battleship gray “torpedo” drew up to our door at about the same time Terry s maroon touring car brought Betty and Jim's sisters to call fer Neal and me. Sheldon's joy at sedng Virginia masked her well-bred but Icy nod to Fvvv, but things congealed again when Sheldon begged Virginia to come to hia car. and with nil aloof air she declined Os course he felt terribly snubbed, since he couldn’t know that it was Evvy she was avoiding and not him. To cover bis discomfiture, he asked Terry to spare him a passenger or two—"young Neal how and Miss Phoebe, for Instance." Phoebe and Neal were overjoyed, and a gleam of pleasure came Into F.vvy’s nar rowed eyes, but the spark didn't last long, for now Virginia turned to Terry ur.d from him to Sheldon. "Oh, dear Gapt. Winston, since you aren’t the stickler for formality I've learned to believe all you dear English to be, will you help mo make amends to Mr. FJlake for my curt refusal of libs invitation —and release me, along with these children, to chaperone the big gray cor?” This meant Virginia was going to keep Neal and Phoebe under her watchful eye—but it threw Evvy out on a cold , world. Smoothly, though with high color tnat meant annoyance, she turned to Virginia. “If you've quite decided. Mrs. Dalton perhaps Fra safe to plan to be with my dear Anne?" If I hadn't been so sorry for Evvy I might have been annoyed at her ap propriating me ks her “dear Anne" right 1 before Virginia. But a more annoying appropriation followed when we picked Jim up. Evvy turned to him with a wistful sweetness Pm sure no man could have resisted. I “Jimmie boy, I'm the odd one in this party. Y'ou won’t make me hopelessly ■ —in the way, will you?" Her tons suggested that every one else had made her feel like an Intruder —and I knew that It must appeal to ev erything chivalrous in my boy’s nature “Y'ou’re Just an added Joy, Evvy," re turned the Eternal Masculine. In another moment Evvy was nestlod up to Jim, and exclaimed, with r little air of confiding: . “Jlmuiie, boy, do yon remember what wonderful ’hunches” I used to have? That time at the Vanderbilt Cup six years ago—and the next fall at Sheeps bead bay?” On and on went her flow of “do yon remembers? and “have you ever for gottens?” Betty never excluded me from her reminiscences of the days in France Candyland Candy land Candy land 334 Massachusetts Avenue EXTRA SPECIAL!™ ™ E :43c Lb. Milk Chocolate Creams, fourteen ti uc fruit flavors, hand-rolled and P- _ hand-dipped, per lb Out All candy made tbe best way and of the Kent m- It S • r* /o /v /o terlni. Telephone your order. We will deliver any quantity. —which wonderful as they were, after all, could be no more strange and alien to me than this discussion of motor races, none of which I had seen. But unlike Betty, Evvy appropriated my hus band and shut me out. I sat desolately holding Neal's box of candy—not will ing to eat it all alone, and rot daring to intrude by offering it to any one. The driver's seat, where Betty and Terry rode side by side, seemed very far away. Jim and Evvy drew closer—closer. Their voices fell to whispers. Suddenly my husband drew away and sat erect alert, vibrating with purpose. And now he spoke loud enough for me to hear. “I’ll follow your hunch, Evvy. Every cent I have with me goes on that Yan kee Kid —Greyson. And if T win, name your reward.” Evvy laughed and slid her hand into Jim’s "to shake on it.” He appeared not to notice her. He was tense agab-; —feverish—like the strange Jim who had sat shaking dice with my young brother 1 lie night before. —Copyright, 1920 (To Re Continued.) SAY “DIAMOND DYES” Don’t streak or ruin your material In poor dye. Insist on "Diamond Dyes.” Easy directions in every package. GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH; WHITEN Make Lemon Lotion to Double Beauty of Your Skin Squeeze the Juice of two lemons Into S bottle containing three ounces of Drcbard White which can be bad at any Brug store, shake well and you have a ftnarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach for few - cents Massage this sweetly frmgTant lotion Into the face, neck, arms and hands each flay, then shortly note the beauty pour akin. Famous stage beauties use lemon Juice ft bleach and bring that aoft, clear, reey-wblte complexion. Lemons have fllways been used as a freckle, sunbur |nd tan remover. Make this up and try! It.—Advertisement. & Co* T?T TL> ATTTTTDTT' Choice of Our r U IVIN 11 U rUL Entire Stock At Reduced Prices Bedroom furniture, dining room furniture, living room furniture, library furniture, furniture for the breakfast room, the sun parlor, the reception hall, the den and for every odd nook and corner — All at Lowered Prices Offering Many Exceptional Opportunities —Ayres—Fourth Floor. CJhe Circle. Special Something New Every Day For Stout Women 175 Beautiful Camisoles At Rare Bargain Prices For this Circle Sale we have taken 175 of our loveliest camisoles of Satins and Crepe de Chine, $1.95, $2.95, $3.95, $4 95 and $5.50 Less than today’s actual cost. -Ayres-Gray Shop, third floor. “ NOTIONS “ Ayres' natural invisible hair nets, 6 for BO*. a dozen for 95<*. Pearl buttons, 3 cards for 20<L Less than actual cost. \ Elastic negligee belts, $1.75. Large, medium and small. i \ Shoe trees, 3 pairs, 20*. .NJF/S. Moth-proof bags, 35*. Sizes 26^x53 inches. —Ayres—Street floor. / Thirty-Four Room Size Rugs At Greatly Reduced Prices WILTONS, AXMINSTERS, VELVETS, BRUSSELS A midsummer mg opportunity that will justify you in anticipating your future needs. 5 seamless tapestry Brussels rugs, reduced to $33.50. 1 fine Axminster rug, size 9x12, reduced to $57.50. 3 fine seamless velvet rugs, are reduced to $50.50. 3 fine seamless velvet rugs are reduced to $05.00. 2 seamless velvet rugs, size 9x12 feet, re duced to $57.50. 4 seamless velvet rugs, size 9x12 feet, re duced to $77.50. Ir. addition to these room size rugs, there ar e also a number of fine smaller rugs, Whlttals, Anglo-Persian and Anglo-Indian, reduced to $1 1.40 and $14.80. These are 27x54-inch. —Ayres—Rug Section —Fourth floor. Organdy FlountingS At Reduced Prices One Lot at $3.25 These are 39 inches wide, of exceptional quality, and are shown in rose, bluebird blue and sand shades. All are finished with several rows of hemstitching. One Lot at $3.50 These also are 39 inches wide, with deep hem and three ruffles, with tucks above. Rose, orchid, Nile, sand, flesh and gray. Only 3 yards of either required for a pattern. —Ayres—Lace Section, street floor. Community Silver Par-Plate Offered at Unusually Low Prices Community par plate needs no introduction as to quality or beauty of design. It serves its purpose well the world over. Knives and forks, set of 6 for $5.50. Sugar shells, big values, at 50*. Dessert spoons, set of 6 for $2.50. Cold meat forks, special value at 90*. 26-Piece Chest for $12.75 The assortment includes six knives, six forks, six teaspoons, six tablespoons, one butter knife and one sugar shell. —Ayres—Silver section, street floor. MOVED! Now Located on the Sixth Floor Traveling bags, suit cases, fitted travel cases, tranks, china, housefurnishings, electrical goods, refrigerators, stoves, cooking utensils and automobile accessories. —Ayres—New departments—Sixth floor. 1 Whlttall Anglo-Persian rug, size 6x9, re duced to $07.50. 2 heavy wool Wilton rugs, size 9x12 feet, reduced to $97.50. 6 heavy wool Wilton rugs, size 9x12, reduced to $109.00. 4 very fine Wilton rugs, size 9x12, reduced to $119.00. 1 Herat! Wilton rug. size 9x12 feet, reduced to $137.50. 1 Whittal Anglo-Persian rug, 8.3x10.6, re duced to $138.50. Hair Ornaments And Smart Combs 25c, 35c, 50c, 65c and 75c Inexpensive, but ideal to meet one’s summer time needs. The assortment is varied and in cludes gray, amber color, demi-blond and shell. The combs are suitable for various styles of hair dressing—round combs, back combs, tuck combs and hairpins in boxes. With the fashion for hair ornaments at Its height, one can satisfy one’s own love for decora tion with good grace. —Ayres—Street floor. 5