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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 21

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St. Louis, Missouri
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21
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ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1941. PAGE 30 5ST.L0UIS POST-DISPATCH, social Activities UNCLE DAN BEARD STREAMLINED CIRCUS ha SCHOOL BOARD VOTES SELF FOND FOR TRIP THE TRUTH ON WINflNT By JOSEPH ALS0P and ROBERT KINTNER MY. MIFF DIES TO ARRIVE TOMORROW Km 111-' is 5jv tvE hundred guests have been invited lo meet iiiisa aiarian Wallace, daughter of Mr.

and ja ErooKinga vvanace, tnis i ernoon and evening at a garden -vie O. Rodes, 8 Upper Ladue Miss Wallace is Mr. Rodes child, the i-arty is his gift if Vior oraduation from John wr pu d- ioughs School. of the Wallace and sides families have been invited rlock. while contemporaries fthe guest of honor will be enter-lei0.

an1 dnnrimr at 7 II BUFl1" l-it The receiving line will rrorrtpn which Is ablM j.inhinium and madonna and Led lilies, and which adjoins the Wallace will wear her ft Uduation frock of white organdy, P. hliiA nirtiira hat -'h ycxiv with oink roses and velvet and will carry an arm-iof sweetheart roses. Mrs. Rodes hite organdy gown has long nd flowers painted in pan- the full skirt; her hat is a the lone terrace where iff? tf buffet table, covered with green Dead DANIEL ARTER BEARD 10 ACTORS' EQUITY OFFICERS QUIT OVER 'SUBVERSIVE' GROUP Action Follows Election to Council of Man Accused of Being Red. NEW YORK, June 11 (AP).

Actresses Florence Reed and Peggy Wood have resigned as vice-presidents of Actors' Equity Association, along with eight other Equity council members, in a group protest against what they termed a "subversive influence" in association affairs. In a joint statement addressed to Bert Lytell, Equity president the council and the union's 4000 members, the resigning officers explained their act was the result of last Friday's Equity election, at which the independent candidates one accused of being a Commu nistwere named to the council. Resigning, besides Miss Reed and Miss Wood second and fourth vice-presidents were Winifred Lenihan, Muriel Kirkland, Claudia Morgan, Josepn Vitale, William David, Ben Lackland, Alfred Kap- peler and Lee Baker. Their statement said in part: "For years we have been strug gling against an influence in our association which seemed to us subversive of American ideals and institutions. This union is ha rassed by partisan politics.

It has lost the good will of the public and the Government" The new council member is Alan Hewitt, who has denied any Com munist affiliation. Elected with him were Mady Christians and Myron McCormick. Lytell said the group resignation came as "a complete surprise." "The resignation of these valuable and experienced officers and councilors is an irreparable loss," he added. DIVORCES FRANCIS Y. ALLEN Mrs.

Helen Carton Allen obtained a divorce yesterday, on ground of general indignities, in Circuit Judge James F. Nangle's court from Francis York Allen, 30 Kingsbury place, a supervisor in the Income Tax Department of the City Assessor's office. Allen filed a general denial. Allen was awarded custody of their daughter, Joan Carton Allen, 3 years old, and $30 a month for support of the child. Mr.

and Mrs. Allen were married July 1, 1936, and separated last New Year's day. -A I gether will not be able to win the war in the end. His confidence in the futut-e, if this country bears its part in the war, was what he was trying to convey to the Senators. Many of his opinions, such as his opinion of the Mediterranean situation, were accurately reported.

But his judgment of the total war picture was not reported at all. He starts with the assumption that, however magnificent a nation's courage may be, it will fail if no longer bolstered by hope. Britain's only hope, he argues, is active aid from this country. So far the British have withstood without flinching such a grinding, cruel attrition as few nations in history have experienced. They will continue to take whatever blows may be showered upon them, so long as their hopes are still alive.

Their morale will crack at last, however, Winant believes, if their hopes are disappointed, and they find themselves permanently con-, demned to a grim defensive battle, with defeat the only possible conclusion. The little people of Britain, who do not know the facts, may be ready to fight on. Winston Churchill, who knows the facts but prefers suicide to surrender, will certainly wish to fight on, but the British equivalent of the French men of Vichy will crawl out of the political woodwork. Terms dictated by Germany will be accepted. And this country will find itself beleaguered, surrounded, without a single ally, lacking the resources needed for defense, in a Nazi-dominated world.

Washington View. That is what Ambassador Winant came here to tell the President, and what he now has told the President. Nor is he alone in holding this dark view. Virtually all the President's advisers, both on high policy and on technical military and naval matters, have been urging the same view on him for many weeks. A single dissent from it, by a man in an important position, would be hard to find at the State, War or Navy Department In his distress over the inaccurate reports of his position, Winant at first wished to issue a public statement telling everything he had come to say at the White House.

He was dissuaded from doing so, for unexplained reasons. The men around the President can hardly speak out unless he gives them the lead. In his message to the nation, the President sketched in most of the facts of the war situation, but failed to announce action or declare it must be taken promptly. Thus the minds of most people, men in the street and members of Congress alike, were left in the same puzzled confusion which was the cause of Winant's mishap with the Senators. (Copyright.

1941.) HARVARD SCHOLARSHIPS FOR 4 IN ST. LOUIS AREA Freshmen scholarships in Har vard College have been awarded to four students being graduated from St Louis and St. Louis County high schools this month. The $600 Harvard Club scholar ship was awarded to Harvey Pastel, son of Mr. and Mrs.

E. A. Pastel, student council president and third in the class of 150 which was graduated from Kirkwood High School. Harvard College announced scholarships, in competition for students of the Middle West, South and West, to Lewis Slack, Soldan, son of Mrs. Martha F.

Slack, 5868 De Giverville avenue; Stephen Taylor Boggs, son of Mr. and Mrs, Judge Boggs, 335 Baker avenue, Webster Groves, and Malcolm Arthur Chandler, son of Mr. and Mrs Arthur L. Chandler, 6834 Water man avenue, University City. small tables the terrace and in the brick-nA earden where white flowers Ur i Profusion.

Ur r.ou" Todes Harris of Louisville. rraduatea a few days ago Collegiate School there, is her for the party. i in case of rain tonight, the party be postponed until tomorrow tight. a Via Frances C. Bright, daugh ter of Mr.

and Mrs. G. Howard Sijht of Princeton, i. ua chosen Monday afternoon, July i for her marriage iu nusseu Gardner, son or Mr. ana jsaxs.

E. Gardner, 43 Portland After the ceremony, which be performed at 5 clock at -e Trinity EpiscoraL, Church in iisceton, a reception will be held tt the Bright home. Wedding in Evanston. interest to St. Louisans Is the wedding of Miss Louise vn Deventer and David Mil- '311 Boyd Jr.

wnicn uxivc pc.c ftprnoon in Evanston, at li o'clock. Mr. Boyd is the son David M. Boyd, 5032 Waterman 4 a i Vuoncf rr with OOUievaru, muu 10 ptovd for the ceremony, and of Josephine Drake Boyd, who ileft 9t Louis yesterday to attend her son's wedding. Miss Van Deventer and her fiance became acquainted at the University of Colorado where they were graduated earlier this month.

She is the daughter of Mr. and Krs. Ralph F. Van Deventer. The ceremony will take place in the chapel of the First Presbyte-rin Church with the Rev.

Dr. Emory W. Luccock officiating. A re tention will be held afterward at Georgian Hotel, Evanston. Miss Roberta Seaver of Evanston will be the bride's onlv attend- WASHINGTON, June 1L IT! HE worst defects of the Presi-I dent's policy of limited rank- ness with Congress and the people were luridly displayed bv Ambassador John G.

Winant'a visit to the Capitol last Saturday. In the course of a round of calls, Winant dropped in to see Vice- President Henry A. Wallace. Wal lace invited Walter F. George, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and two or three other Senators to have a talk with the returned Ambassador about conditions in Britain.

And after the talk, one of the Senators passed on to the waitine newspaper men what he understood Winant had Bald. Winant is a slow speaker, given to elisions, and to leavine- ioint obvious to him to be inferred by nis audience. The Senators were fearful this countrv was "investlno- in a losing war" and Winant wished to persuade tnem this was not so. No doubt the Senator who gave the press his version of Winant's remarKs prererred to look on the bright side. And thus stories were printed all over the country, the sense of which was summed up in the banner headline carried by one of the best known, most ably edited American newspapers: "Winant Says British Can Win Without America in War." This is, unfortunately, the precise contrary of what Winant believes.

The fault was not Winant's, or the Senator's, or the newspaper men's. The fault was in the failure of the White House to disclose the complete facts of the war situation, however bleak, which encourages confusion of this sort. His Judgment. THERE cannot be the slightest doubt that Winant was grossly misrepresented by the second-hand summary of his views. Winant himself was so disturbed that when he received the early editions of the Sunday papers on Saturday evening, he did his best to have at least one of the stories killed.

In the interval, your correspondents have again investigated the purpose of Winant'a return to Washington. They have received positive assurance, from the highest possible sources, that Winant's sole motive in' leaving his post was to warn the President in person, with all the force at his command, that to delay further was to court disaster. In fact, Winant is not only far from thinking Britain can win the war without America as a fighting partner; he- is also firmly convinced that German victory may be the outcome unless this country accepts full fighting partnership with Britain in the immediate future. He does not fear the British will not fight to the finish if this country is squarely with them, or that America and Britain to CHINESE CERTAIN THEY'LL ALWAYS REMAIN CHINESE Continued From Page One. dogged patience and preservance of the Chinese fci.ables them to withstand setbacks, privations and discouragements which would do-feat a less hardy race.

In the background is a racial tenacity and solidarity wh'ch have defied Japanese efforfa to break them down. Though many Chinese know little of patriotism in the Western seme, all Chinese know that they are first of all Chinese. What gives the Japanese invaders cause for despair that even the lowliest coolie and the worst traitor never quite forgets that he is a Chinese. All this does net disguise the fact that China confronted with perplexing interna! problems for which solutions nave not yet been found. The Chinese genius for getting around obstacles is about to be put to a very cevere test ENGLISH QUEEN SENDS NOTE JO AMERICAN KNITTER, 91 Expresses Appreciation of Work for British of Texas Great-Great-Grandmother.

DALLAS, June 11 (AP). Mrs. D. R. Weyand, great-great-grandmother of 91 years who knits a sock a day for the British, dropped her first stitch in years when she received a letter from Buckingham Palace.

Written by Katharine Seymour, lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth, the letter said: "The Queen commands me to write and say that Her Majesty has heard that at the great age of 91 you are still knitting socks for the Red Cross, and the Queen desires me to send you a word of cordial appreciation for all that you are doing to help Great Britain at the present time." Mrs. Weyand, who learned to knit on brobm straws at the age of 6, has knitted for soldiers of four wars, Civil, Spanish-American, World War and the present Each Member Wishing to Gtf to N. E. A. Convention to Get $300.

Despite some pressing problems, chief of which is how to reduce expenses, the Board of Education met for only 15 minutes last night, long enough to vote a 300 appropriation for each of its 12 members who wish to attend the National Education Association convention in Boston, June 29 to July 3. Although the deficit for this year is expected to be approximately $300,000 and higher exDenditures are foreseen for next year, the 11 members present quickly voted for the appropriation without discussion. The Finance Committee was polled hurriedly to sets its anDrov- aL Ten members indicated they would attend the N. E. A.

meeting. No action was taken on the application of AFL, Public School Custodians' and Matrons' Local 118 for extension of employment of the 102 elementary school matrons from nine months to 12, at the present salary of $85 a month. The explanation offered was that, in the present financial condition, no such increase in appropriations could be made without due consideration by the Finance Committee. Superintendent of Instruction Homer W. Anderson announced that WPA lunchrooms would be open at the Ames, Adams and Ban-neker schools during the summer.

An individual has offered to pay all expenses up to $600, he said. An amendment to-board rules requiring all school employes to reside in the city, previously approved by the board, was readopt-ed after minor changes had been made. An exception is made for employes now residing in the county. Physical training courses designed to fit young men for army life will be given during the summer on athletic fields at six public schools, A. O.

Anderson, director of physical education for the Board of Education, announced today. The program begins Monday. UNION MUSICIANS ASKED TO STOP MAKING RECORDS SEATTLE, June 11 (AP). Union musicians are considering a prohibition of the makine of rec ords by union members. The proposal was made at yesterday's session of the convention of the American Federation of Musicians, AFL.

Action was deferred. Some delegates said a'few musicians made big money for recordings, while the playing of the records by radio stations and in juke boxes deprived many union musicians of work. A committee on the inroads of mechanical music into earnings of ieaeraaon memDers reported a large percentage of records were made in Europe before the war, and that now, with that source cut off, was the time for the federation to act against American-made records. Some members DroDosed that the estimated 400,000 juke boxes be made to pay a percentage of receipts into the federation's treas ury to help support unemployed musicians. maid of honor at the Veiled Prophet Ball in 1937.

Mr. Barnett attended Washington University. uut-oi-town guests at the wedding: will be Mr. and Mrs. A.

Taylor of Chicago. Miss Jane Honto Loomis, daughter of Charles Russell Loomis, El Paso, Tex, was married last night in El Paso's First Presbyterian Church to Tom Miller Kirksey, son of Lieutenant Colonel and Mrs. Guy Kirksey, former St Louisans. The Rev.Paul Newton Poling officiated. The bride's gown of white embroidered lace was made with a long basque bodice and a full, sheer skirt, and her veil was tulle reaching her finger tips.

For "something old and something borrowed" she wore gold bracelets belonging to her husband's grandmother, Mrs. Thomas David Miller, 31 Arundel place; for "something new" a gold pendant set with diamonds and rubies, the gift of the bridegroom. Mrs. Mallory Miller was matron of honor; Miss Charlotte Boy kin, Miss Patricia Mooney, Miss Virginia' King and Miss Louise Jameson, bridesmaids, and Miss Katharine Harvey and Miss Marjorie Ann Carlin, Junior bridesmaids. They wore pastel shaded costumes and carried summer flowers.

After a reception at Hotel Pas 3 Del Norte, Mr. and Mrs. Kirksey left for California. Mr. Miller, for whom the bridegroom was named, was in El Paso for the wedding.

Col. Kirksey is commandant at Biggs Field. 1 Writer Almost 91 When He Succumbs at Estate in Suffern, N. Y. NEW YORK, June 11 (AP).

Daniel Carter Beard, one of the founders of the Boy Scouts of America, died today. "Uncle Dan," as he was affec tionately known by millions of Boy Scouts, would have been 91 years old on June 21. He had been ill since April 20 when he contracted a cold at his 14-acre estate at Suffern, N. T. The venerable scouter and naturalist died in his rustic woodland home, the Brooklands.

Scout Chief. His daughter, Mrs. Barbara Price, was at his bedside. Death resulted from a heart condition which followed the cold and which was complicated by old age. His son, Daniel Bartlett Beard, of Omaha, was reported flying here.

He is a member of the National Park Service. "Uncle Dan" was chief to Boy Scouts of America which he helped Ernest Thompson-Seton found in 1910, two years after Sir Robert Baden-Powell organized the scouts in England. The woodsman, artist and writer had enjoyed robust health until recent months. He was the author of many books on nature lore. Last Work Unfinished.

His recent illness had kept Beard, who won early fame as the original illustrator of Mark Twain's early books, from com pleting the drawings for a recent article he wrote for the August issue of Boy's Life. He had writ ten a monthly article for that magazine for 30 years. Recently he had spent most of his time dictating articles and col oring his last drawings. Beard always stressed moral in struction in his work with boys, but it was his pride to be "a man's man." One of his sayings was: "I smoked for 40 years but when the women commenced, I quit, because I wasn't a sissy." He frequently declared that just being a boy was a privilege. He once said: I would rather be a boy than a czar, a count a no-account or a discount, and I would rather be an American boy than President of the United States." STOKOWSKI YOUTH ORCHESTRA PLACED IN RECEIVERSHIP Continues Tour Despite Action of Discharged Press Agent in Indianapolis.

INDIANAPOLIS, June 11 (AP). Leopold Stokowski's all American youth orchestra con tinued its tour today although it was placed in receivership yester day in Marion County Superior Court. Judge Othniel Hitch appointed Deputy County Clerk Cletus Seibert receiver for Youth Artists, which handled the orchestra, on the petition of Horace Kiser, New York, discharged press agent who said the corporation owed him $909. The orchestra played to an audience of 6500 persons last night and left for Louisville for a concert tonight Manager Myerberg said the orchestra would finish its tour, scheduled to end in Los Angeles June 19. Stokowski declined to comment 400 Canadian Safe in Fire.

HUBERDEAU, June 11 (Canadian Press). About 400 children were herded to safety by 30 brothers of the religious order of Notre Dame de la Misericorde today when fire destroyed their orphanage in this village, 60 miles north of Montreal. MAin 3975 VW I WWW I VI III. I Restyled Rinling Brothers Show to Be Here for Four Days. The new and streamlined Ring- ling Bros, and Barnum A Bailey Circus will arrive in St Louis at dawn tomorrow from Evanaville, Ind, to open a four-day stand on the big lot at Kingshighway and Southwest boulevard.

Tour long trains will pull into railroad yards, west of Kings-highway and south of Manchester avenue, and unload their cargo. There will be Mr. and Mrs. Gar-gantua, the most publicized gorillas or tne decade. And there will be giraffes and elephants, clowns and aerialists.

By mid-morning the circus' 41 tents, including the air-conditioned big top, will be set up and everything will be in readiness for the show to start at 2:15 p. m. The circus gates will open at 1 and 7 p. m. each day.

The evening shows will start at 8:15 o'clock. For the last two weeks the circus advance agents have been in town preparing for the great visit More than 50 advance workers have been plastering the city with posters and whooping things up in general for what traditionally calls itself "the greatest show on earth. The advance men say that it has been made more handsome and more lavish than ever. All of the cages of the menagerie have been restyled, to make the animals look less unhappy. Mr.

and Mrs. Gargantua, billed as the leading attraction, have air-conditioned cages, to keep them in good health and good humor. All this was brought about by Norman Bel Geddes, some of whose work in another field can be seen at the City Art Museum, where his plan for a redesigned St Louis is on view. Bel Geddes also brought about a change in the circus' big spectacle, which was usually held at the start and which many persons missed. It now comes halfway through the program and, in the modest claim of the advance men, "Nothing like it has ever been seen before." It tells the story of Old King Cole and Mother Goose.

However, the streamlining of the circus has not caused the omission of any of the old and favorite acta. MRS. WE1N3RENNER FUNERAL Services Tomorrow for. 'Wife of Former Judge. Funeral services for Mrs.

Clyde Dyas Weinbrermer, wife of J. Ray Weinbrenner, former Judge of the Court of Criminal Correction, who died yesterday of heart disease, will be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow at 4111 Lindell boulevard, under direction of the Weidemueller Funeral Home, with cremation in 0ak Grove Crematory. Mrs.

Weinbrenner was 51 years old and resided at 6063 McPherson avenue. Surviving, in addition to her husband, are her mother, a sister, two brothers and two sons, John Ray Weinbrenner Jr, who volunteered for army service several months ago and now is in training at Camp Grant, 111, and Bernal D. Weinbrenner, a student at Washington University. A i i 7JT TV Victor yi.i.C1'-" aNAD B-coM ktt 0. 4l8 Ix 1 person.

'116 ftf. Zjitiom i ab- line, was Mex- racvjnt. Mr. Boyd will be attended by Conlin of Blackfoot, Idaho, then For pat- o' of nted is a peaL arti en- MISS PATRICIA JANE McGUIRE Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

P. J. McGuire, 236 Oakwood avenue, Webster Groves, who will sell souvenir programs on Mrs. Crawford Duncan's team at the Tuberculosis Day ball game at Sportsman's Park, June 25. Miss McGuire will return June 13 from Pine Manor Junior College, Well-esley, where she has completed ber freshman year.

Evanston since Sunday with his sister-in-law; Mrs. Meyer left yes- iciuay morning with her sons. Conzelman-Woas Wedding. ABOUT 75 guests will be present at the home of Mr. and 'KjTwd T.I joun craznen, drive, for the wedding at 5:30 o'clock this afternoon of Miss Virginia D'Arden Woas and John Gerard Cdnzelman.

The bride is the dausKter of Mr anil Mm a Ludwig Woas, 7745 Delmar boule vard. Mr. Woas will escort his daughter to an improvised altar in the living room, where white larkspur and lilies are used as decorations. She will be gowned in white mous-seline over taffeta, fashioned with a fitted bodice and small short sleeves made of organdy ruffles edged with lace. A tiara of orange blossoms will secure her finger-tip length veil.

Instead of a bouquet, the bride will carry a prayer book covered with gardenias. Mrs. Braznell and Miss Doris Ann Clarahan, who will attend the bride, will wear pale blue bouffant marquisette gowns and wide-brimmed hats of malines. They will carry pale yellow roses. Robert Conzelman will be his brother's best man.

Mrs. Woas has chosen for her daughter's wedding a dusty pink tailored gown. Mrs. Oscar Conzelman, 7360 Pershing avenue, the bridegroom's mother, will be in blue marquisette. After a brief honeymoon, Mr.

Conzelman and his bride will occupy their home at 2636 Terrace lane, St. Louis County. The bride was graduated yesterday morning at Washington University. Mr. Conzelman was graduated from Washington University two years ago.

He is a brother of Jimmy Conzelman, football coach and sports writer. To Be Wed Tonight THE Rev. Dr. Harry T. Scherer ft-ififltA tonieht at the of Miss Lonabess J'wmSkMn Mrs.

William Harry Willcockson Mrs. William Harry Willcockson, 210 Jefferson road, weosier md Charles Crippen Bar- nett Jr. The candlelight ceremony ni h. riprfnrmed at 8:30 o'clock at the Webster Groves Presby- Th chancel will enan J8 basket be centered Wlth huge whtt summer flowers and nf white summer flowers ana smaller baskets at either side. The bride will walk down the candle-lit aisle on the -arm of her father.

Her white faille gown has long sleeves, a fitted bodice with a low heart-shaped neckline and a full skirt which flares into a long train. A shirred juliet cap will secure her finger-tip veil and her modesty veil which win laii Deiow her bouquet of white orchids and larkspur. Mrs. Philip L. Taylor, her sister's matron of is to wear a pink valencienne lace bodice with short cuffed sleeves and a double marquisette skirt.

She will have a spray or larKspur in ner hair and carry delphinium and pink larkspur. The gowns of the eriaesmaias, Miss Jane Gilmore and Miss Virginia Lee Barnett, the bridegroom's sister, will be similar in design to Mrs. Taylor but will be aqua in color. They are to carry pink larkspur and wear a spray of the same flowers in their hair. Mr.

Barnett, a son of Mrs. Charles C. Barnett, 3915 Potomac street, will have William M. Thompson as best man. Ushers will include Paul Lombardi, William J.

Stone, Robert Hutzep and William H. Willcockson Jr, the bride's brother. Mrs. Willcockson has chosen a natural colored lace dinner gown; th hrideBTOom's mother, a wis- teria colored lace gown, cow win have a corsage of purple orchids at their shoulders. After the wedding a reception will be held at Algonquin Golf Club.

The fireplace in the lounge is to be ornamented with white summer flowers as a background for the receiving line. Later Mr. Barnett and his bride will depart for an undisclosed destination. They will be home July The bride is a graduate of Hos-mer Hall and attended Stephens College in Columbia, Mo. She graduated from Washington University where she became a mem-ber of Pi Beta Phi.

She waa a the the on rite; aim loral uch akef Mr. in sver, I bt N. Season's End SHOP CLOSING FOR THE SUMMER Ad Remaining Stock FOUR GROUPS ARE MARKED Wer formerly prtctK. to $115 We are adding at Safe Prices; New ft fSt Dresses jwst received from New York. Jewelers to America 'for 1 1 1 Years A A A I at and iphl ecft" pio thf busyi -stman; jonn uorsey or uroana, 2, David Krebs of St.

Louis, Rob-trt Howard nf TTvanstnn snrt TTar- ity Burnett of Dayton, ushers, The bride will wear a white iatin gown, designed on princesse lines, with lace edeine- the collar isd the tulle veil. Her headdress is a hal8 of heirloom roses point lace from Mrs. Josephine Boyd's wedding gown. She will carry nite orchids and stephanotis. auas seaver will De in pale blue cfcWisette with a pink and blue bouquet of larkspur and roses.

auss weaver will be in pale blue miBoyui auu U3C9i tIitJtt 1 ti. i --v a.i.Lcr a noneymoon, jvir. Boyd nnrl hia Kri1 4 Philadelphia. umer members of the bride wmS iamny who will attend tte wedding are his three sisters, Emilv and Miss Marv An- fay Ail pooms familv rv-hr, attend ooya, ana Mrs. Robert E.

eyer. Mr. Mov Ko for a limited time only! You Can Hare Your Old FUR COAT REMODELED into a modern 1941.42 creation for at low at: this includes: Beityling Interlining Canvas Fitting New Loop New Button Glazing Cleaning Call CH. 6767 for an estimate without charge Blight (barge for extra skins, if necessary. Rclining Special Ht your fur coat (Wined and relintd finait quality "yon lining (xarantctd for two ton's wear interlining axtra charge for loops and but hil Air-Cooltd Second floor 1 1 SXTH ni LOCUST 250 s10 maaem est Le.

and ibed per-phs. 1 go tual by th rklt xrj, ther i for i af pio ntiS bo i oeB" it if se. Fiery Diamonds and Platinum Because of the ingenious arrangement of 16 smaller round diamonds and 6 baguettes around the large center diamond the (op of this ring appears to be one big flashing stone. The mounting is platinum and the diamonds are all of fine Jaccard quality. Ask our diamond experts about setting your own center, diamond in a mounting of this type.

Mounting above without center stone, $325.00. Ring Above, $875.00 Buy en Deferred Payments Plut Small Service Charge RcqisfcreJ Jeweler Arkg Gsn Socift Yor Anrkm I Dollar fWO NAMES YOURS mj DAD LIKES CANDY, TOO! ft Sy WMtch lit ftct if fit up with peasure when' 1 you ap'cia Father's Day box. 1 5Jv (W, it consists of molded chocolate pipes, 1 1 1 1 ilgjvt cit't a -id bis favorite I 00 1 IWfl 2-PobbI TATHEH'S DAT" Bs I 0 Shippd Anywhtre 806 Oliv iD Candies 706 Wshin9ton fAifiM i 512 Locust Uiyj7 Tts aooms I I fofUria i tM imb" but of w- the 3H re 1 SX Aff-Jbcfvsfre SpKial Katw ANY WIIK AT BANFF (During Season) for stays ef 7 Jays tr longer. Room with bth and table d'hote meals. Privileges of golf course, tennis courts, swimming or stays of 7 days tr longer.

Room with bath and table d'hote meals. Privileges of golf course, tennis courts, swimming pools, concerts and ballroom. ft tew $8.30 parsM pm 4ay, rfovbJ ccopaacy. Similar Rate at Chateau Lakb Loubb tfiMof.JACCAaa.aiNf urith Locust at Ninth.

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