Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 216, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1934 — Page 6
PAGE 6
City Health Group Will Hear Nurse Miss Elsie Wulkop to Speak at Open Meeting. BY BEATRICE BI’RGAN Timet Woman't Pace Editor. PROGRESS of activities of the Maternal Health League of Indiana has been aided by the cooperation of Miss Elsie Wulkop, head of the Children's sanitarium oa Children's Island. Marblehead, Mass. Miss Wulkop arrived in Indianapolis in October and will continue to assist the league until April.
On Monday at an open meeting of the league at All Souls' Unitarian church, Miss Wulkop will describe her experience in establishment of several maternal health clinics in Michigan. Asa medical social worker, Miss Wulkop is one of the few in the country who is free to travel in assisting new’
Miss Kurgan
groups in establishing projects. As head of the children's hospital, her active duties begin in June following the close of school. The sanitarium provides children with the attentions needed to rehabilitate them after hospital experiences. Dozens of college women, studying to be medical social workers, seek experiences in the hospital in preparation for college degrees. Miss Wulkop has been working with Mrs. Lee Bums, who is leading the league, formerly the Indiana ( Birth Control League. She has as- I sisted the local workers in facing its ! problems and planning its programs. Program Announced % Mrs. J. A. Goodman with Victor Jose Jr. and Professor R. Clyde White have announced the complete program of the league’s open meeting. Dr. C. O. McCormick will describe the history of birth control In America, and Professor White will explain “Social Applications of Birth Control.” “Legal Aspects of Birth Control” will be outlined by Dr. Murray N. Hadley. “The field for medical social workers is a wide one for women. “Miss Wulkop declares. “Groups in many states are seeing the need of maternal health leagues to preserve individual health and family social and economic standing. The medical social worker is needed to cooperate with physicians and social | agencies.” Election Scheduled Miss W’ulkop recently talked at a tea at Mrs. Goodman's home and j has addressed smaller groups of | women, interested in principles of! the league. After Miss Wulkop studied at the! Boston School of Social work, she! headed the social department of the Massachusetts General Hospital. She has spent three winters in De- ! troit, organizing clinics and visited j frequently in Indianapolis when the league here first began its activities two years ago. At the business meeting Monday, directors will be elected and a constitution ratified. Others making; preparations for the program are Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz. Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith. Mrs. Wendell Sherk j and Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr. VALENTINES TO BE THEME OF MEETING Valentine program will be presented at the meeting of the Venetian chapter. International Travel- i Study Club. Inc., Monday afternoon, at the home of Mrs. Prank McCracken. 27 North Tremont avenue. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. George Mack. Mrs. Crystal Kreglo is program chairman and Mrs. John W. Thornburgh will install new members. Mrs. S. R. Artman will talk on Germany. Lo-Sin-Loy to Meet Miss Elizabeth Anne Mathews will entertain members of the Lo-Sin-Lov Club at her home. 4726 College avenue, at 7:30 tonight.
Daily Recipe
CREAM DRESSING
Mix in a double boiler 1 teaspoon mustard, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons flour, lMi teaspoons powdered sugar and few grains cayenne, add 1 teaspoon butter, 1 egg yolk and 1-3 cup vinegar slowly; cook over water until mixture thickens; cool and pour into 4 cup thick cream beaten stiff; either sour or sweet cream may be used.
STOP THAT COLD TODAY! Tomorrow May Make It Twice as Difficult to Relieve!
The time to stop a cold is before it gets started! A cold once rooted is a cold of danger! Don't waste your time and run the risk of serious complications by using makeshift methods. Remember, a cold is an internal infection and. as such, calls for internal treatment. A cold also calls for a COLD remedy and not a preparation good for a number of other things besides colds. Grove'* Laxative Bromo Quinine is what a cold requires. It is expressly a cold remedy. It is internal and direct. It is complete in effect. It does the four things necessary. First, it opens the bowels, gently, but thoroughly. Second, it combats the cold germs in the system and reduces the fever. Third, it relieves the headache and grippy feeling. Fourth, it tones the entire
Health League Prepares for Session
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Left to right, Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, Mrs. Lee Bums, Mrs. J. A. Goodman
and Mrs. Wendell Sherk. Officers of the Maternal Health League of Indiana have been conferring this week in preparation for the annual business session and open meeting Monday in All Souls’ Unitarian church. 'TVtcit* rHic u’ppV at thp home of Mrs Lee
Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN
Those who are caught in the web of circumstances which they do not understand, are invited to put their problems before Jane Jordan. Helpful advice from readers is solicited. I have a letter from a woman whose husband thinks this column is all bosh, but reads it just the same. She is afraid to see the details of her problem in print, for fear they will be recognized. Her husband is a man who does not make friends. He’s against everybody. He approves of nobody and nobody approves of him. The wife makes friends easily and does not know what is the matter with
her unsociable husband. The only people who fail to make friends are those who doubt their ability to make the grade with others. There are certain very real circumstances in the man’s child hood which account for this fear. The barrier between himself and others was not of his making,
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Jane Jordan
and although he could have torn it down by sheer force of personality, he did not feel equal to the task. Therefore, he avoids the pain of his separateness by placing ’he blame on other poeple. Outwardly he claims that something is wrong with everybody, but inwardly he feels that something is wrong with himself. The wife should not criticise her husband for his surliness, but encourage him to try to win people. Even if she had to fib a little it would help him to hear something pleasant that someone said about him. if her friends understood that the man’s attitude was only a defense of his own inadequacy, they could help by a little kindly flattery. His lack of a sense of social security again is evident in unfounded jealousy of his wife. Some jealousy is inevitable in love. No one can escape some fear that he will lose the object of his love. The difference between normal and abnormal jealousy lies in the nature of the cause that inspires it. People who are jealous for reasons which do not exist, who read a sinister meaning into the most trivial circumstances. are sick psychologically and in need of treatment. If this husband could be persuaded to face the facts about himself, it would have a curative effect. He is living in an unreal world of his own creating. He tears dow T n his fellows to build up himself. He imagines tortures which do not exist. Reality often is tough, but not half so tough as the lonely retreat which he has constructed for himself. The wife in this case has pushed down all her complaints for the sake of peace. In no instance has she thrashed anything out with her husband. The only way she can control him is by getting sick. Then he is penitent and co-operative. The result is that her health is broken down and she considers herself something of an invalid. I believe that she is sick because she lacks the courage to stand up against her husband's mal-adjust-ment to life. For her own sake she ought to resort to rule by illness, but should make use of her energies in a determined effort to make the man face things as they are. The children of such a union should not be burdened emotionally by an unnecessary recital of the father's past. nan Dear Jane Jordan—l have been keeping company with a young girl for quite a while. She is just
system and fortifies against further attack. Anything less than that is taking chances. Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine contains nothing harmful and is absolutely safe to take. For more than forty years it has been the standard cold and grippe tablet of the world, the formula always keeping pace with Modem Medicine. Every druggist sells Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine, 30c and 50c. Good druggists won't try to talk you into a substitute for the sake of a few pennies extra profit. When you feel a cold coming on, get busy at once. Go right to your druggist for Grove's Laxative Bromo Quinine. Always ask for it by the full name and look for the letters L B Q stamped on every tablet. —Advertisement. t
Burns, chairman. Mrs. J. A. Goodman is vice-chair-man; Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, recording secretary; Mrs. Theodore B. Griffith, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Wendell Sherk, treasurer.
in her twenties, and I am past middle age. She has a steady who tries to keep a close watch on her. He doesn’t want her to have anything to say to any one else. She tells me about this affair. I asked her what he would do if he should find out that she had dates with me and she said that, he would just die. He -wants to marry her. Now 7 do you think that she would settle down if she should marry him? Why does she trust me with things that she knows would go so hard with him if he should find them out? MIDDLE AGE Answer—Woman’s vanity is her weakness, and two suitors are more exciting than one. I have no doubt that she is very fond of you and finds the attention of an older man very flattering, but I warn you against taking her too seriously. She isn't profoundly in love wtih the young man, either, or she wouldn’t take so much pleasure in deceiving him. She is enacting a little play in which she is the heroine. It’s very gratifying to her to fancy that her young man would “just die” if he knew about you, but I notice that she doesn’t risk telling him. I, for one, do not begrudge her the fun she is having in practicing her powers as a woman. When she gets enough of it (if any woman ever gets enough) she may settle down and make a first rate wife. But I’d hate to see you get a bad heartache in consequence. a u u Dear Jane Jordan—This letter is for Dorothy L. It makes me heartsick to think of any girl marrying a man she is not certain she loves, even though she respects him and likes him very much. There is no more miserable existence than to be made love to constantly by a man you do not love and who does not have the physical appeal that goes with real love. I believe I would rather be the one in love than the loved one, because to love someone, and to give, is so much more joy than to take something you can not return. It is like being forced to eat more and more when you already are fed up. I am not guessing at this. I know. The worst thing of all is that the person in love can not see that he is not loved, and one has to go on in this misery to keep from breaking a good, respectable man's heart. Better to break it now that to do it later in years when it will not heal so well. G. L. M. Answer—There is so much sound sense in this letter, evidently culled from actual experience, that I print it for Dorothy L’s benefit. I thank the writer very much for taking the time and trouble to write.
CHURCH GROUP WILL PRESENT COMEDY
Se-Re-Dra Players of the Second Reformed Church, Pleasant and Shelby streets,
will entertain members of the church and their friends with a comedy at 8:15 tonight at the church auditorium. William Keene is director of the play, ‘Here Comes Charlie.” Members of the cast include Miss Helen Losche, Herman Baumer, Randolph Schubert. Miss Marie
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Miss Losche
Baumer, Miss Thelma Roth, Don Collins, Bob Brink, Miss Norma Johnson. Miss Madeline Sanders and Homer Hafer. BRIDGE CLUB TO INSTALL OFFICERS Miss Maxine Foltz will be installed as president of the Hi-Bid-ders’ Bridge Club at the meeting of 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. Joseph Hesslegrave. Other officers are Miss Lois Lee, vice-president; Miss Kathryn Cooper. secretary; Mrs. Ray Brown, treasurer, and Miss Muriel Byers, historian.
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. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES .
Party Proceeds to Aid Guild’s Hospital Work
Reservations for fifty tables have been made for a benefit card party to be held Saturday afternoon at the Banner - Whitehill auditorium by the White Cross Children’s Cheer Guild. Proceeds from the affair will be used in the guild’s work at the prenatal and pediatric clinics of the Methodist hospital. Preliminary plans for the work include providing layettes, helping with routine work and following up cases in homes. This is in addition to the guild's present activities at the hospital. Mrs. Arthur Vehling is card party chairman, assisted by Mrs. Cleo Wiltsie, Mrs. Harold R. Haught, Mrs. Herschell Wright and Mrs. George Hoagland Jr., president of the guild.
State Republican Club Aids Chosen for Year’s Service
Commitees and chairmen for the Indiana Woman’s Republican Club, of which Mrs. Samuel H. Fletcher is president, have been named for the year. The club will entertain with a president’s day tea at 2:30 Thursday, Jan. 25, at the Columbia Club in honor of Mrs. Fletcher and former presidents. Mrs. Louise Weisenberg, membership secretary, is assisted by Mrs. Pyrle E. Hughes, chairman, and Mrs. Hazel Workman, vice-chair-man, and a committee composed of Miss Minnie Cowan, Mesdames W. H. Armitage, Charles Shaw, Mary Pcsten, J. Burdette Little, Ida Belser, Nellie Topham, Fannie Huff, William H. Remy, D. D. Wilmeth, Gaylord Morton, Idele Richey, Frank Collman, Grace Guess, H. O. Tormohlen of Portland, and Miss Augusta Stevenson. Other committees are: Entertainment, Mrs. Max Norris, chairman; Mrs. Martha L. Huggins, vice-chair-man, and Mesdames Clarence Martin, Bert Thurman, Charles Tyler, Warren Crouch. O. A. Hobbs, Edna Pauley. Pearl Riddel, Lillian Sedwick.‘ W. J. Yule, F. W. Danner, Taylor Gronninger, Charles Mann, Paul Wetter, C. A. Prichard. Georgia Poe Dunnington Franklin, and Miss Genevieve Brown. Headed by Mrs. Nelson Ways and means, Mrs. E. E. Nelson, chairman; Mrs. Wolf Sussman, vice-chairman, and Mesdames Maude Hobson, Stella V. Norland, Edgar Hecker and Ralph Gregg; house, Mrs. Harry Dunn, chairman; Mrs. Walter Pritchard, vice-chairman; Mrs. Dale Spencer and Mrs. Hester ; Hart; publicity, Mrs. Lewis F. Pomush, chairman, and Mrs. Reuben Miller, vice-chairman. Auditing, Miss Adele Storck, chairman; Mrs. Ella Van Sickle Gardner, i vice-chairman, and Mesdames Linton Cox, Phoebe Link, Allen T. i Fleming, M. B. Spellman and Miss ! Ella Groninger; parliamentarian, I Miss Jessie Levy; dramatics, Mrs. I Ovid Butler Jameson, chairman, and Mrs. Helen Johnson Karns, vicechairman. I Contact committee is composed of Mrs. Henry Campbell, chairman; Mrs. J. McDonald Young, vice-chair-man; Mesdames Ruth Marshall. Marguerite Hill, T. W. Demmerly, Harry Tutewiler, Robert McKay, H. J. Scconover, Dora Cooper, Edgar Hart and I. E. Rush. Council Delegates Chosen Delegates to the May Wright Sewall Council of Women are Miss Jessie Levy, Mrs. Ella Van Sickle Gardner, Mrs. Henry Campbell and Mrs. Bert Thurman. Hospitality is in charge of Mrs. Josephine Fairhead, chairman; Mrs. Frank Cones, vice-chairman, and Mesdames Samuel Lewis Shank, W. M. Bosson Sr., Ruth Marshal, Sabina Epley, Howell Elli* Carl Schwinzer, Myrtle White, Lillian Earley, O. W. Stevenson, Greenwood; V. S. Rose, Evansville; David Ross, Edna Wright, Elwood; Arthur Downing. Clara Conyer, Lula Norris, CHIFFON HOSE of alluring charm 95c. 2 Pairs, *1.75 tVwCr 69c. 3 Pairs, *2.00 //M ' ’ N I S L E Y gr\ . 44 N. Penn. St. &
Garden Club Is Sponsor of Lecture Dr. Arthur C. Hall ta Tomorrow in Town Hall Series. Mrs. Robert T. Ramsay will intro- j duce Dr. Arthur C. Pillsbury at the ! Town Hall lecture at 11:30 tomorrow morning at English’s. The lecture is being sponsored by | the North End Garden Club of which Mrs. Ramsay is president. Dr. Pillsbury, naturalist, scientist | and explorer, will discuss “Miracles in Nature,” illustrating his talk wth I moton pictures made with a microscopic camera of his invention. I Mrs. Ramsay will be hostess for a luncheon to follow at the Columbia j Club. Seated at the speakers table with Dr. Pillsbury and Mrs. Ramsay will be Miss Jane Tudor, Zionsville; Mrs. Ace B. Johnson, Mooresvnle; Mrs. M. S. Goulding, Mrs. W. E. Gabe, Miss Elizabeth Bertermann, Mrs. Henry L. Foreman, Mrs. W. E. Balch, Mrs. Walter Marmon, Mrs. Edson T. Wood, Mrs. Sidney R. Esten, Mrs. Othniel Hitch, Mrs. Herman Wolff, Lawrence V. Sheridan and Samuel E. Perkins 111. TRAVEL TALK WILL FOLLOW LUNCHEON Lady Aberdeen Artist chapter, International Travel-Study Club, Inc., will meet for a 1 o’clock luncheon Saturday, Jan. 27, at the Barbara Frietchie tearoom. Afternoon program will be presented by Mrs. Roy W. Johnson, accompanied by Mrs. R. W. Shepherd, Alice Adelia Hite and Jane Schmalholz. Mrs. S. R. Artman will lecture on “The Cradle of Liberty.” Mrs. H. G. Hennessey is president of the chapiter, which recently was organized, and other officers include Mrs. Joseph Sahakian, first vice-president; Mrs. Huber Martin, second vice-president; Mrs. Johnson, secretary, and Mrs. Shepherd, treasurer and music chairman. Mrs. Artman to Speak Mrs. Paul Ritter will entertain members of the Victorian chapter, International Travel and Study Club. Inc., at luncheon tomorrow at her home, 3136 Graceland avenue. Mrs. S. R. Artman will talk on the United States.
Dr. Lillian Seilken, Miss Clara Gilbert, and Miss Mary Sleeth, Rushville; decorations, Mrs. Omar Hawkins, chairman; Mrs. Martha Saulcy, vice-chairman, and Mesdames Mary B. Hedges, Fannie Bryson Ronald Foster, Joe Hogue, Nettie New, Harold H. Bryson, A. L. Leatherman, and Miss Jeanette Wilson. Luncheon, Mrs. E. E. Neal, Noblesville, chairman; Mrs. E. L. Burnett, vice-chairman, and Miss Pauline Pettijohn, Noblesville; telephone, Mrs. M. E. Darling, chairman; Miss Emma McNanny, vice-chair-man, and Mesdames Pearl Williams, Maude Ogborn, Anna O’Boyle, Nellie Ranson and James Easten; speakers bureau, Mrs. H. E. Barnard, chairman; Mrs. Herbert A. Lackey and Mrs. Clifford Wagner, vicechairmen; music, Miss Pearl Randall, chairman; Mrs. A. J. Tilson, vice-chairman, and Mesdames Archie Bobbitt, Leland Fishback, William T. Randall, Ina Stebbing, Paul Ulen and S. W. Stevenson, Greenwood.
Sororities
Miss Katherine Combs, 1941 North Dearborn street, will be hostess for a meeting of Alpha ChL Sigma sorority tonight. Initiation services will be held. Phi Beta Chi sorority will hold a business meeting and election of officers tonight at the home of Miss Lucille Atherton, 230 East Ninth street. Mrs. James Mesalem will be hostess Monday night for a meeting of Phi Sigma Theta sorority. Miss Maurine Stump and Miss Jane Wildey will be guests. Rho Zeta Tau sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Mrs. Clarence Ramey, 315 West Thirtyfirst street. Miss Virginia Light, 2153 Oxford, will entertain members of Alpha chapter, Mothers and Daughters Club, Thursday. Readers' Club Meets Mrs. Otis Pierce Renchen entertained the Indianapolis Readers’ Club at her home, 860 Eastern avenue. yesterday. Mrs. George E. Maxwell reviewed “As the Earth Turns”; Mrs. James C. Mead discussed the author, Gladys Hasty Carroll and Mrs. Harry Beazell was in charge of the musical program. Girls to Attend Dinner • Girl’s Friendly Society of Christ Church will meet Tuesday in the parish house for a 6 o’clock dinner. The society members will take a sight-seeing tour of the city following the dinner.
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BETROTHED
* -pWr *** *
Miss Hazel Ann Rutledge
Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Rutledge, 2616 Guilford avenue, announces the engagement of their daughter, Miss Hazel Ann Rutledge, to W. K. Schweickhardt. The wedding will take place in the spring. Mrs. Trusler Is Hostess Today for Club Party Mrs. Harold M. Trusler entertained members of the Arbor Vitae Club with a luncheon today at her home, 651 East Twenty-third street. Brass candelabra with white candles were used on the luncheon table which was centered with arbor vitae. Past presidents of the club held a candlelight ceremony in honor of the new officers who were installed today. They are Mrs. Walter Boernler, president; Mrs. W. F. Swope, vice-president, and Mrs. Estele Roberts, secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Frank Von Burg was installing officer. Guests at the meeting Included Mesdames Gus Meister, Frank Kinzie, Charles Blake, John Van Sickle, Floyd Wright and Mrs. Alma Arnold, Toledo, O. Woman’s Club Welfare Group Hears Minister “America, the Glorious,” was the subject of a talk by the Rev. Elmer G. Homrighausen before members of the community welfare department of the Woman’s Department Club at the clubhouse yesterday. Luncheon preceded the lecture and discussion. Mrs. Othniel Hitch, chairman of the department, introduced the speaker. Miller Hamilton gave a short talk on the Indianapolis Water Company, ilustrating his talk with motion picture slides. Charles R. Metzger will talk on “The Community and the Delinquent Child” at the next meeting of the department, Wednesday, Feb. 21, at the clubhouse. Judge John F. Geckler of the juvenile court will be special guest. Besides Mrs. Hitch, other officers are Mrs. Harold K. Bachelder, vicechairman; Mrs. B. F. Le Monde, secretary, and Mrs. Charles H. Smith, treasurer. SHOWER IS GIVEN FOR BRIDE-ELECT Miss Mary Ida Shank, 1936 Mansfield street, was hostess last night for a surprise shower given by Gamma chapter, Rho Delta sorority. The party was in honor of Miss Mary Ann Seele, whose marriage to the Rev. R. J. Bierbaum will take place Jan. 28. A centerpiece of white and blue chrysanthemums was used and the bride’s-elect colors, silver, blue and white, appointed the party. Two Will Entertain Miss Mabel Reed and Miss Mildred Lorash will*' entertain members of the Co-Wa-Ma Club with a bridge party tomorrow night at the home of Miss Reed, 1218 Keystone avenue.
AYRES BUDGET SHOP CLEARANCE Women's Dresses Mostly Sizes 40 to 44, with a Few 36 to 52 and Half Sizes 60 Women’s Silk Dresses, reduced to $6.95 20 Women’s Silk Dresses, reduced to $8.95 —AYRES—BUDGET SHOP, THIRD FLOOR. Misses' Dresses Sizes 12 to 20. Broken Lots. 100 Silk Day and Afternoon Dresses, now $6.95 20 Silk Day and Afternoon Dresses, now $8.95 —AYRES—BUDGET SHOP, THIRD FLOOR. L. S. AYRES & CO.
Zotos Permanent Wave, Given Without Machine; Ready for Women of City; Several Beauty Shops Adopt System, Said to Be Effective for All Hair, Even Dyed and Bleached. BY HELEN LINDSAY ALONG With the art of mummifying bodies of the dead, the building of pyramids, and other ancient Egyptian secrets, the knowledge of permanently waving the human hair was lost only to be rediscovered many hundreds of years later. This is the contention of experts in beauty culture, who believe that Nestler, the originator of the permanent wave as it now’ is known, was only reviving one of the
secrets which the beauties of Cleopatra's day knew well. The first permanent wave machines in America were cumbersome affairs, each appliance for a single curl weighing heavily. They were introduced in America about 1904, and were looked upon with w’onder. alarm and amusement by the public at that time. The cost of a permanent wave then almost was prohibitive for any except persons of wealth. Many improvement have been made in the art of permanently waving hair since that time. The latest development is one which is to be introduced in some of the most exclusive shops in Indianapolis within the next few weeks, and which requires no machinery. In practically all permanent waves, the general methods are the same. The hair is divided into sections, each wrapped upon a cylindrical curler, and then fitted into an appliance which sends a certain amount
of heat through the hair. The w’ave is supposed to stay in the hair until it grows out and is cut off. a a u nan Actresses Approve New Method WITH the new Zotos method, which has received numerous awards in French and Belgian beauty exhibits, no machinery is used. The hair is wrapped in the usual way upon the curlers. These are then moistened w’ith a solution which contains no lye, alkali or other injurious substance, but which has an oil base. Around these are wrapped pads, similar in principle to the electric heating pads used in hotels and homes. Moisture applied to the substance concealed in these pads causes them to generate heat, w’hich gives the wave. The new system has been used on all types of hair. Bleached or dyed hair, which for many years w’as believed to be hard to wave can be treated successfully by the Zotos method. A difference in the solutions used on different types of hair determines the extent of the curl. o a u a a a All Types of Hair Can Be Waved RECENTLY Dorothy Stone, who carries on the acting reputation of her famous father, Fred Stone, was given a Zotos permanent while aboard a Fullman train. Other well-known actresses are patrons of the shops using the new method. Sally Eilers and Craw’ford are listed among the movie stars who have had the new waves. The Pickens sisters, radio stars, received permanents by the new method while rehearsing one of their programs. Listed among the Indianapolis shops which will give the new wave are the French Hair Dress Salon, Nancy Ann Shop, Jew’ell Beauty Shop, A. Hildebrand, Green Comb Beauty Shop. Sheldrake Beauty Shop, Smith Hair Store, Jack and Jill Shop, Hattie Ingwersen, and Rink’s Beauty Shop. Operators of a number of other Indianapolis beauty shops are investigating the method, and will sign for the Zotos system soon. Demonstrations of the new method have been made at the Lincoln during this week.
Nursery School Will Be Topic of Next Lecture in Series
Miss Martha Alice Commons, of the Shover Nursery School, will talk on the “Educational Value of a Nursery School” at 10:15 tomorrow morning at the Rauh Memorial library. The lecture, open to the public, is the second in a series of seven talks sponsored by the American Association of University women on Friday AURORA COUPLE TO BE HONORED Mrs. Matthews Fletcher will entertain with a dinner party Saturday night preceding the costume dance to be given by Colonel William Guy Wall at the Woodstock Club. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Peebles, Aurora, formerly of Indianapolis, will be honor guests at the dinner. PROGRAM IS GIVEN AT HOME FOR AGED Mu Phi Epsilon Patroness Club ensemble provided the program today for the fourth of a series of entertainments being given by the Welfare Club for residents of the Home for Aged Women. Mrs. Orville F. Shattuck is director of the ensemble and Mrs. Harriet Burtch, accomapnist. A trio, composed of Miss Bernice Reagan, violinist; Mrs. Camille Fleig. harpist, and Mrs. Burtch played special numbers.
JAN. 18, 1934
Mrs. Lindsay
mornings on the theme, “Child Guidance.” Hostesses for the lecture include members of association whose children attend the school: Mrs. Horace A. Shonle, Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, Mrs. N. Taylor Todd. Mrs. S. Runnels Harrell, Mrs. L. L. Schwartz, Mrs. Harry V. Wade, Mrs. W. H. Maxwell, Mrs. Florence Carpenter and Mrs. Debitha Honess, Jamestown. The concluding five lectures will be conducted by Mrs. John Cunningham, beginning Jan. 26 at the Rauh library. MRS. JOHNSON TO DIRECT PROGRAM Mrs. E. C. Johnson will be master of ceremonies for a program to be presented Monday, Jan. 29, at the Irvington Masonic temple, under auspices of the Irvington Union of Clubs. Mrs. Johnson will be assisted by Mrs. Vaughn Cornish and Mrs. Tyler Oglesby. Mrs. Joe Curry is music chairman, to be assisted by Mrs. James Loomis and Mrs. James Matthews. Irvington trio will present a program of five selections. Benefit Party Set Brightwood Self-Help unit' will entertain with a card party tomorrow night at the Y. M. C. 4- for the benefit of the unemployed.
