Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 238, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1927 — Page 6

PAGE 6

FASHION DICTATIONS HALTED IN NEGLIGEE SELECTION

Ease and Intimacy May Be Expressed in Personal Items for Boudoir Wear—Sheer Silken Hose Is Part of Ensemble —Short Skirts Rule. Woman wants to be mistress of her clothes. But she must listen to the dictates of fashion when she dtermines the length of her skirt or the height of er hat and the shape of her heels.

But Dme Fashion does not reign in the boudoir. There it is that women can select her negligee to her heart’s content and after her own styles. "Go as far as you like with the bizarre and the exotic when you select a negligee,” says Henri Bendel, fashion expert. ‘‘Probably it is because of the standardization of clothes generally, the rtstraint in line and elimination of detail that negligee and lingerie have blossomed out so marvelously that women are bora with a love of beauty and color. Restrict them at one point and they burst out somewhere else. “Negjigee is an expression of comfort, ease and intimacy. It can be itself. Every woman should own at least one absolutely colorful, gay and entirely feminine negligee, as a support to her vanity and her femininity. It is as much a support in times of depression as the right hat is. "A negligee should be of the softest fabrics and of colors that give the wearer the greatest pleasure. Line is none the less important, even if it looks casual, for the modern woman wants to look slim and narrow in her most negligent attitude.” Since shorter skirts now prevail in boudoir attire, the sheer silken hose and fancy “mules” are an essential part of the ensemble. PLAN BENEFIT CONCERT A concert will be given Friday evening at the First Friends Church by the members of the Earlham College Women’s Club, who are sponsoring a country-wide campaign for the purchase of a pipe organ for the new building nearing completion on the Earlham campus. On the program will be Mrs. Grace L. Miller of New York, organ soloist and teacher, who will give two numbers. Soprano solos will be given by Mrs. James M. Pearson, who was formerly a member of the quartet of the Meridian Street M. E. Church. Bass solos will be given by Paul C. Raymond, at the present a member of the Athenaeum male quartet and of the Mendelssohn choir. Other numbers will be given by the Imperial Male quartet composed of F. E. Ellis, W. C. Rynearson, C. L. Hunt and W. C. Hayward. Mrs. C. L. Hunt of Brownsburg is chairman of the affair. Observe President’s Day Mrs. Frank Nessler will preside at the annual president’s day luncheon of the Service Star Legion, Hamilton Berry chapter, Tuesday at the Chamber of Commerce. Greetings will be given by former presidents of the chapter, who are Mrs. B. W. Gillespie, Mrs. Linton A. Cox, Mrs. Myron R. Williams, and the incoming president, Mrs. Cora Young Wiles. A tribute of remembrance will be offered Mrs. E. J. Robison, who died recently. "What We Are Doing Nationally” will be discussed by Mrs. Bruce Maxwell, national executive secretary, of the Service Star Legion. A group of songs will be given by Mrs. T. W. Engle accompanied by Mrs. M. D. Didway. Mrs. Ruth Rainier Nessler will give several harp selections. New officers will be installed. The ancient Order of Shepherds will give a card party Tuesday evening in Plummers’ Hall, corner of Alabama and E. Washington Sts. Mrs. Fred Leeds, Mrs. Joseph Leans a.nd Mrs. W. W. White will be in charge.

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Bride to Be Given Party Miss Grace Pritchard will entertain this evening at her home, 357 Downey Ave., with a miscellaneous shower In honor of Miss Jane Routzong whose marriage to Milton Loftln will take place Saturday night. Decorations and appointments will be carried out In the bridal colors of yellow and turquoise blue. Gifts will be presented to Miss Routzong on a tea cart bearing a large white box tied with turquoise blue ribbon. The tables at serving time will be lighted with yellow candles tied with turquoise blue ribbon. The guests will be the Mesdames H. M. Routzong, Robert Fennell, Everett Day, T. R. Lyda, Grady Cline, Ralph Duncan, Leonard Schwartz, Roland Cox, Herbert Hill, George Stiltz, H. R. Corbin, and the Misses Kathryn Burgan, Barbara Fisher, Esther Horne, Louise Knarzer, Eleanor King, Marie Tacoma, Edna Schulz, Daisy Schulz, Martha Armstrong, Leuince Horn, Frances Lyons, Margaret Kluger, Margaret Newton, Elizabeth Ann Miller, Frieda Doeppers, Margaret I-lohl, Mildred Stevensort, Avis Woody, Gladys Bell, Helen Gorman and Gladys Bruce. On Tuesday evening Miss Barbara Fischer will entertain in honor of Miss Rbutzong. ENTERTAINS WELFARE CLUB Mrs. Nelle Shellhouse was hostess this afternoon for the Welfare Club

To Preside at Luncheon

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Presiding at the Indiana Women’s Democratic Club meeting Tuesday at the Claypool will be Mrs. James R. Riggs of Sullivan.

tirely left jne. I also had a breaking out on my hands for years that nothing would heal, but now this has disappeared, and I am sure that it was S. S. S. which removed the cause. lam now in perfect health, and want to add that I have tried all kinds of medicines, but I think S. S. S. is the best.” Carl C. Campbell, 115 West Main St., Johnson City, Tenn. S. S. S. is purely vegetable. It is extracted from the fresh roots of 'medicinal plants and herbs and gives to Nature what she needs in building you up so that your system throws off the cause. S. S. S. is sold at all good drug stores In two sizes. The larger size is more economical.—Advertisement.

Three negligees as elaborate as dinn er gowns, left to right: Turquoise blue and gold, flesh colored crepe Elizabeth and crimson velvet.

at the McLean Arms tea room. A bowl of sweetpeas In the Dresden shades served as a centerpiece at the dining table. Assisting hostesses were the Mesdames E. L. Burnet, John Simmons, William Russell, George Dickson, Harold Dillon, William Cox, and Mrs. Leroy Martin.

Mrs. Janie s R. Riggs

Mrs. Emily Newell Blair, of Joplin, Mo., vice chairman of the Democratic national committee, will be the speaker.

MENUS For the FAMILY BY SISTER MARY

BREAKFAST Sliced bananas with canned apricots, cereal, thin cream, crisp broiled bacon, scrambled eggs, graham toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Spanish onions stuffed with baked beans, rye bread, spinach salad, jellied oranges, fruit cookies, milk tea. DINNER —Liver savory, baked macaroni, stewed onions, tomato jelly salad, whole wheat rolls, crisp apple pudding, milk, coffee. The woman on a farm always has plenty of apples at her disposal and sometimes grows weary of the eter nal paring and cooking of them. The “crisp apple pudding” suggested in the dinner is quite unusual and most delicious. Apples are usually one of the least expensive fruits for the city housewife to buy, so she will welcome the pudding recipe quite as eagerly as her sister in the country. Crisp Apple Pudding Four to eight apples, 12 cup boiling water, % teaspoon cinnamon, 1 lablespoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind, 1 cup sugar, 3-4 cup flour, 1-2 cup butter. Pare apples, remove cores and cut in thin slices. Put Into a well-but-tered baking dish and pour over water, cinnamon, lemon juice and grated rind. The dish should be about twto-thirds full of apples. Mix and sift flour and sugar and rub in butter with finger tips. Spread over top of apples and bake in a moderate oven for forty minutes. Serve With plain or whipped cream. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) PLAN BRIDGE PARTIES The first of a series of bridge parties to be given by the Alpha Chi Omega Mothers Club of Butler University this month will be held at the home of Mrs. David Swain Sr., 1903 N. Delaware St., Friday afternoon. The hostesses will be the Mesdames Walter King, Charles H. Smith, John Patton, Orville Lewis, John Lambert, John Barclay, T. Edward Chapman, Arthur Hayfield and Miss Emma Matthews.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

JOHN COOLIDGE IS COLLEGIATE, YES SIR He Wears the Widest of Wid e Pants and You Can’t Get Him Into Any Cutaway—A Funny Story About a Bottle. By Flora G. Orr WASHINGTON, Jan. 10.—“ Yes, we are collegiate.” John Coolidge, who was here for the holiday festivities, wears the widest of wide pants. At a recent reception they didn’t get him into any striped trousers and cutaway. Double-breasted blue serge was what the young man wore.

Nobody has ever questioned the Sahara-like atmosphere of the White House under the present regime. That makes a story whiqh is going the rounds in Washington now all the funnier. A prominent Republican Senator from the East is very fond of 'Cointreau. His wife, visiting in New York, succeeded by some hook or crook in getting hold of a bottle of this rare veintage, and knowing that another prominent Republican was about to embark for Washington on the Congressional Limited to confer with President Coolidge, she asked the said statesman to act as her messenger and take the bottle of Cointreau to her husband. He agreed, but to his consternation when he stepped off the train he was met by a White House car and was driven directly to the President’s presence. There, feeling some.what nervous and aware of a 'certain package in his bag, he was taken to a room upstairs and told to camp right there all the while he was in Washington. He went to bed that night, taking the bottle of Cointreau with him so that he would be sure not to forget to get it out of the White House as soon as possible. Hiding It in a safe place while he should be at breakfast was a problem, but he finally put it in his coat pocket. After breakfast he was graciously told that a White House car would be at his service all during the day. He replied that he should like the car at once. It would make a better story to say that he tripped just as he was going out of the White House door and that the CointreauBut truth must out. He got away with it. He ordered the car to drive ironto to the Senate office building there he rid himself of the burden George Washington’s marriage to the Widow Custis was re-enacted here at the Mayflower Hotel at the annual Washington assembly ball. Walter Davidge, a decendant of the Washington family, took the part of Washington, dressed in black velvet and laced coat. Mrs. Walter Tuckerman was the reincarnation of Martha Custic, with white wig and a gown of orchid brocade said to be like the one which the real Martha wore. Some of the guests were In fancy colonial dress; others were In conventional, modern evening attire. Miss Natalie Hammond, daughter of John Hays Hammond, took the part of the little colonel, dressed in a white uniform and cocked hat. The lances alternated betwpen modern jazz and the old time Virginia reel. t The Lady in White is becoming the name which Mrs. Coolidge is known on the streets of Washington. Even in winter it is the costume which she favors above all. Gray is her

BAKBiies If you want bakings that are pertfect in taste and tenderness — that are pure and wholesome, use CAUIMET THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING POWDER JBBB BAKING EASIER IT*B DOUBLE ACTING leg \\j% Tfanei Those of Any Other Brand

next favored color. Her other street costumes, which are of black, are faced with grey or white. To go with these ensembles, she has a gray coat and fiuffy fox collar and gray footwear. Mrs. Coolidge has one coat of seal skin, made rather short in drap-over fashion with a high turnover collar, which can be buttoned up tight the throat. Even presidents go to movies. This is a favored form of diversion upon the Yacht Mayflower. One night the President and Mrs. Coolidge went to the Interior Department auditorium and viewed with other invited guests the picture, "Tell It to the Marines.” John LeJeune, commander of the Marine Corps, was the official host. Distinguished visitors In Washington: Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Gilbert, Jr., from Berlin, Germany, where the youthful financial wizard, Mr. Gilbert, holds down the job as agent general for reparations under the Dawes plan. LOCAL CAR HOLDS SHOfSINTEREST Little New Marmon Is Feature in New York. Bn Timm Special NEW YORK. Jan. 10.—Indianapolis unquestionably holds the center of the stage at the New York automobile show this week, the little Marmon eight receiving tremendous ovation and biggest hit here. Unprecedented crowds gather around four big Marmon exhibits, largest ever held at the Commodore Hotel, Belmont Hotel, Grand Central Palace and Broadway at Sixty-Fourth St. G. M. Williams, Marmon president, has Instructed the factory to immediately step up production to 32,400 cars for this year. Dealer Interest In the new Marmon indicates doubling of production within six months. Actual retail sales are far beyond expectations. LACE JABOTS A simple canton crepe dress of beige ha.s brown lace jabots falling from neckline to hem in front and from waistline to hem at the sides.

Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. 2 9 4 9 Inblosed find 15 cents for which send Pattern No. Size j Name * 4 * Address * * City

EXTREMELY BECOMING LINES A becoming, slender style with slightly full hemline features a snugly fitted hipline and surplice closing bodice with bloused effect. It's easy lo make! Join side and shoulder seams of waist and attach two-piece skirt. Wool rep, crepe satin, faille crepe, cashmere and charmeen are approprate for Design No. 2949 for general wear. Pattern In sizes 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 Inches bust measure. The 36-inch size requires 3Vi yards of 40-inch material with 3-8 yard of 32-inch contrasting. Price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Our patterns are made by the leading Fashion Designers of New York City and are guaranteed to fit perfectly. Our Pattern Catalog is 10 cents a copy. It’s worth much more to the woman who sews. Every day The Times will print on this page pictures showing the latest up-to-date fashions. This is a practical service for readers who wish to make their own Rothes. You may obtain this pattern by filling out the accompanying coupon, enclosing 15 cents (coin preferred) and mailing it to the pattgrn department of The Times. Delivery is made in about one week. Wheeler Should Be Removed By Mrs. Walter Ferguson If the churches, the Women’s Christian Temperance Union and the other forces for uplift want to keep on with their good work and retain the respect of the Nation a well as the world at large, they had best get rid of Wayne B. Wheeler, who, as head of the Anti-Saloon League, represents them. Wheeler may not do all the work in these organizations, but he seems to do most of the talking. With Government chemists making an effort to take the poisonous properties out of denatured alcohol, a. humane work which would probably mean the saving of many lives, Wheeler has no patience. He expresses himself as being perfectly content to have the drinkers all die. To him a dead man is just as good as a thirsty one. Here is a matter which the sane women of the country should resent, no matter how ardently they may desire a dry America. For this one thing we must remember: Sometimes even the husband of a W. C. T. U. member, sometimes the elder of the church, sometimes a minister of the gospel, sometimes the boy whom we love, may taka a drink. For these surely no woman desires death. Wheeler seems to think he may just as well be dead as alive. There is such a thing as common sense even in the work of saving souls. And common sense Is mostly what the Anti-Saloon needs. Taking a drink is vastly different from being a confirmed drunkard. The things are as far apart as the poles, no matter what propaganda may say to the contrary. The drunkard may be a cumberer of the earth, but the man who takes an occasional drink can and often 'Taffeta Kerchief \==/ This dainty handkerchief Is made of blue washable taffeta decorated with a corner basket i.i pink, green and > black.

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does accomplish great things for humanity. The time has come when the forces for the eradication of evil, the friends of prohibition, the members of the church, whose ranks are swelled by women, must remove franatics like Wheeler who make enemies of those whom they would convert. For these are the men who aare nothing for humanity, who do not love their brothers as they are admonished by Christ to do. They only desire to see some pet project of theirs succesful, regardless of consequences. Such slaves to an idea may have their moments of power, but inevitably comes the day when the people will rebel against them. Wheeler thinks more of prohibition as a cause than of the service It will do for men, and this has alt ays spelled the end of leadership. PERSONAL ITEMS Mrs. J. C. Buchanan, president of the State Assembly Woman's Club, announces that Mrs. Walter Behmer and Mrs. W. C. McMahon will be at the Columbia Club Tuesday from 10 to 4 to settle for tickets for the luncheon Wednesday. The Ladies Auxiliary to the Commonwealth Community Club will give a card party Tuesday evening at the club, 3208 E. Michigan St. Reports were given by the members of the board of directors of the Junior Lea/rue at a meeting this afternoon in the therapy room of the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital. Mrs. John S. Fishback presided. Mrs. Alice Tyler will entertain the members of Francis Review No. 8, W. B. A. all day Tuesday at her home, 4544 Guilford Ave". CERVUS CLUB TARTY Hostesses for the guest card party' given this afternoon by the Cervus Club at the Elks Club were Mrs. L. T. Coleman, Mrs. Fred Uhl and Mrs. L. E. Welsman assisted by Mrs. William Radcliffe and Mrs. Frank T. Randall.

WANTED A good customer of ours who recently moved to Florida stored with us his Welte Mignon (Licensee) Reproducing Piano. This customer now advises us that he will not be able to continue payment on this fine Instrument. We will sell this fine reproducing piano for the balance due, or by some responsible party assuming the monthly payments. The Baldwin Piano Cos. 35 Mounment Circle

JAN. 10, 1927

LEAGUE TO KNOW* FIVE EMMS Women Voters to Have Former Officials as Guests, First of a series of Introductions to five ex-mayors of the city will be given the League of Women Voters at a luncheon Thursday at the Columbia Club. Thomas Taggart and Samuel Lowis Shank will be the first guests. Mrs. Frank Hatfield Is chairman of the program committee, assisted by Mrs. Walter Greenough, Mrs, Fred Ayres, Miss May Louise Shipp, Mrs. David Lurvey and Mrs. Christian Olsen, Mrs, Charles Pfafilln Is chairman of the luncheon, assisted by Mrs, John W. Kern, Miss Martha Beeson, Mrs. Maurice Coburn, Mrs. Rlohard Coleman, Mrs, S. J. English, Mrs, Jack Goodman, Mrs, Henry b'rcirman and Miss Margaret Shipp. The municipal study clasa will meet Jan. 18 at tho Chamber of Commerce, MRS. BLAKER EULOGIZQ Hold Memorial Services Sunday at Presbyterian Church, "Mrs. Blaker was a pioneer In making the State realize that tho child had a personality,” Mrs, Dr, W. A. Millis, president of Hanover College, in paying tribute to the lata Dr. Elizabeth Blaker, Indianapolis Teachers’ College founder, in a memorial ser-vlce at the Second Presbyterlan Church Sunday afternoon., “The young woman who came under the Influence of Mrs. Blaker here developed with the traits of the highest type of womanhood." "Back of all her learning and knowledge,” said Prof. Oscar Williams of De Pauw University,” which ' made her a great educator, was her | own fine life and lofty ideals which she inspired in others.” Miss Normal Mueller gave several vocal selections and Charles Hansen played the organ. The Rev. Jean S, Milner presided and the Rev. M. L. Haines, pastor emeritas of the first Presbyterian Church, prayed. NEW OVERSHOES New overshoes aro taking the form of Russian boots, many-colored galoshes and short wool socks to be worn outride the hose, but inside the shoes. I POLICE CHIEF HELD Bn Times Special ROCKPORT, Ind., Jan. 10. Sheriff Robert Woods arrested Brooks Saturday on a stealing $29 from Forest Young, rural mall carrier. Brooks is police chief here and roomed with Young. All Help in one tablet for Colds Modern science has developed four effective helps for colds. Now they are combined in one tablet, called HILL'S. One of the world's largest laboratories perfected the prescription. It is so well-proved, so quick and complete that we paid $1,000,000 for It, HILL'S stops a cold in 24 hours. It checks the fever, op?ns the bowels, tones the entire system. It is kept ever-ready In millions of homes by people who have proved its powers. Don't rely on lesser help. And don’t delay. A cold need never develop if you keep HILL’S on hand. And It need not continue when you get™4t. Start it now. Be Sure Price3oc CASCARA £ QUININE Get Red Box with portrait

Don’t Think of flaying BiirQ CARpETs J\UUiJ LINOLEUMS Until yoa’ve Inspected oar big ■took*. DORFMAN RUG CO. _2oj_ly_\Ynnh St H. g7SQ