Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 330, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1927 — Page 8
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SOCIAL AND CLUB ACTIVITIES. P. T. A. and Y. W. C. A. NOTES. SUE and ILENE LETTERS.
REPUBLICAN WOMEN OF INDIANA GATHER HERE All-Day Meeting Held at Columbia Club —Hear Mrs. Robinson, Mrs. Boys and Mrs. Urbahns.
Women leaders of the Republican party over the State -attended the allday meeting at the Columbia Club today. Following an address of welcome by Mrs. Arthur R. Robinson, Mrs. Florence Riddick Boys, State probation officer, Mrs. Grace Banta Urbahns, State treasurer, talked. At the luncheon served In the ball room at the club, Miss Dorothy Cunningham, national Republican committeewoman from Indiana, spoke. Mrs. William Gremelspacher, president of tho Indiana Woman's Republican Club, which sponsored
Times Pattern Service PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, lnd. and 2* 7 V A Inclosed find 15 cents for which send Pattern No. Dull x Size Name Street City
A SEASONABLE SUIT STYLE FOR THE "LITTLE MAN.” 5774., Cool and comfortable with short sleeves, and developed in pongee or linen, will this model be, and equally satisfactory in velveteen, Jersey or flannel, with long sleeves for additional warmth. The Pattern is cut in 4 sizes: 2,4, • and 8 years. A 6 year size will require 1% yards for the blazer, and 1 yard for the trousers in material 86 inches wide, if blazer is made with long sleeves. If rnado with short sleeves l>i yards is required. Every day The Times prints on this page pictures of the latest fashions, a practical service for readers who wish to make their own clothes. Obtain this pattern by filling out the above coupon, inclosing 15 cents (coin preferred), and mailing it to the Pattern Department of The Times. Delivery is made in about a week. PRESENT OPERETTA The Philomathean Society of the Indiana School for the Blind will present the Japanese operetta, "Princess Chrysanthemum” in the school auditorium May 6 at 8 p. m. as the society's contribution to the music week festivities. Frieda E, Heider, teacher of voice and piano, Is director. The cast includes Eva Batchelor. William Nottingham, Wilbur Waid, Albennie Warfield, Claude Dooley. Charlton McClain and Mildred Rich ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT The engagement of Mss Ruth Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Taylor to Leigh Felton was announced at a bridge party Wednesday evening. A color scheme of pink, orchid and yellow was carried out in the decorations. *Pink roses and orchid sweet peas in a silver bowl and pink tapers in silver holders tied with orchid tulle was uesd as a centerpiece. MAKE RESERVATIONS Miss Sara Henzie, 1901 N* New Jersey St., is in charge of reservations for the annual May guest dinner of the International Study and Travel Club to be given in tile Riley room, May 10 at 6:80 p. m. AU chapter presidents are requested to have their reservations in PiMay 6. MRS. HOOP TO TALK Mrs. Margaret Hoop, head of the women's and children's department of the State Industrial board, will ■peak at the Aitrusa luncheon meeting Friday at the Columbia Club. Her subject will b<# “Women and Children in Industry.”
F. B. WHEELER FURNITURE CO. 611-813 E. Washington St. Thursday ' " ■ N & Friday ) Just to acquaint you with Wheeler’s new location, we offer this beautiful BRIDGE LAMP \\ Wrought iron base with 'S® decorated pigskin parch £ c merit shade, adjustable to any height. > $J .98 I Worth more than double II —No phone orders, none Wttfc delivered. g For f -4r| Furniture I and Rugs x'' I You Can f| &<? Do , I Better at ® WHEELERS 611-813 East Washington Street 6 Doors East of East Street
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DEVOTED TO WOMENS INTEREST
the meeting today, told of the im\ portance of local organization work. Miss Mary Sleeth of Rushville, vice chalnnan of the Republican State committee; Mrs. Clara Mason, member of the State Legislature from Terre Haute; Mrs. Wilma Sinclair La Van, national committeewoman from Ohio and Senator Arthur R- Robinson, spoke at the session this afternoon. Miss Vera Bowman and Mrs. Louis Traugott gave musicale numbers and Mrs, George Dailey of Logansport, gave readings.
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COMMITTEE NAMED The nominating committee for the Indianapolis Federation of ParentTeacher Associations recently named includes; Mrs. Robert .1. Walden, second vice president; Mrs. J. W. Thompson,. Miss Mabel Keller, principal School 70; Mrs. A. C. Raffenperger, president School 8, and Mrs. Oscar Jones, president School 80. CLUB PLAY The New Century Club will give i a play at Ft. Friendly, 512 N. Illinois j St., at 2 p. m. Friday for the bene- | fit of Major Robert Anderson No. 44 and George H. Thomas No. 20 W. R. C. Auxiliaries. TABERNACLE SOCIETY The St. Joseph Tabernacle Society will entertain with a euchre, lotto, bunco and five hundred party Friday evening in St. Joseph's hall, 617 E. North St. ORDER PLANS PARTY The Patriotic Order of America, Camp No. 2 will give a card party Friday at 8 p. m., at 29 1 / fc N. Delaware St.
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BY SISTER MARY Breakfast —Baked rhubarb, cereal wth dates, cream, crisp toast, soft choked eggs, milk, coffee. • Luncheon—Lamb loaf, creamed potatoes, carrot salad, sponge cake with canned fruit and whipped cream, milk, tea. Dinner Baked ham, browned sweet potatoes, steamed spinach with butter and lemon juice, romaine and orange salad, rice souffle, bread, milk, coffee. If, when you are planning to serve spinach, you will give this vegetable a long bath in a large pan of water you will find it much easier to clean. Several hours before time to cook the spinach cut off the roots. Drop the leaves loosely into a big pan of water and wash through several waters. When you think the spinach is clean put it Into a large pan of salt water and let' stand two hours. Then when ready to use, rinse through several clear waters and cook in the water that clings to the leaves. This thorough washing insures delicious cooked spinach free from grit. Carrot Salad One cup grated raw carrot, one cup cottage cheese, lemon juice, sweet cream, hearts lettuce Sprinkle carrots with as much lemcn juice as they can absorb. Let stand half an hour. Combine carrots and cottage cheese adding enough cream to make moist. Season with salt and pepper and drop from tip of spoon into lettuce leaves. This is an excellent salad for children. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)
HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS
Pressing Cloth I A piece of black sateen is the best j pressing cloth for navy blue or black I suits. Use with dull side next garj ment. Clean Irons A piece of parrafin wax should be kept in a clean cloth and the electric iron rubber over it and wiped off cachj week before using. Clothes Brushes Whisk brooms clothes brushes and hat brushes can be cleaned easily by dipping up and down in warm water with a little soda in it. Dry in sun.
LIFE'S NICETIES Hints on Etiquet
1. Is it proper for a professional man to use his title, as “Dr.” or “Rev.” on cards, rather than “Mr.”? 2. What does “P. P. C.” written on a calling card mean? 3. W hat does “R. 8. V. P.” mean? THE ANSW ERS ' 1. Yes. 2. "Pour prendre conge, ’ which is French for "to take leave.” It means I that the owner is going away for a I time. 3. "Respondez s’ll vous plait,” or "Answer soon, please.” It is a request for an immediate acceptance or refusal of the invitation. ANDERSON HOST TO 250 * Council of Women in Annual Session. Bu Vvited Pm* ANDERSON, Inp., April 2S.— Approximately 250 visitors are expected to attend the sixth annua! convention of the May Wright Sewall Indiana Coyncil of Women, today. Delegates were here from Indianapolis, South Bend, Bloomington. Huntington. Bedford. Lyons, Connersville and Newcastle. The convention opened this morning with Mrs. W. A. Denny of Anderson. president, presiding. At noon the Anderson Council of Women was hostess for a luncheon. Mrs. Florence Riddick Boyes. State probation officer, spoke this afternoon, and Dr. Valeria Parker, national president, made an address.-Dr. Parker will be the guest of honor at the banquet tonight at the Hotel Stillwell. Following a legislative and citizenship discussion on Friday morning there will be a luncheon and the final business session will be held in the afternoon. CARD PARTY Indianapolis Lodge No. 7 W. W. M. and B. will give a card party FrlAlice Wiltshire, 130 W. Twentieth St. Alice Wiltshire. 130 W.Twentieth St. Bridge and euchre will be played. FOOD SALE Aids of W. R. C. will hold a food and apron sale Saturday at the Indianapolis Light and Power Company, W. Washington St. Mrs. Theodosia Sheldon is general chairman, assisted by all the aids. B. K. T. PARTY The Ladies' Auxiliary to the B. of R. T. No. 297 will give a card and bunco party at 1002 W. Washington St., Friday night.
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9 to IS North Illinois St. Opposite Claypool Hotel
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SUITS
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LOCAL CLUB WOMAN HONORED AT RECEPTION
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Members of the Woman s Department Club entertained Indianapolis club women and presidents of Indiana clubs with a reception in honor of Mrs. Edward Franklin White at the clubhouse this afternoon from four to sx. Mrs. White, first vice president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, will be a candidate for the presidency of the federation in 1928. Hundreds of club women of Indianapolis and presidents of federated clubs in Indiana attended the recop'tior. In the receiving line with Mrs. White were the president and presiI dent-elect of the Woman's Depart- ! inert Club, Mrs. W. W. Thornton land Mrs. S. E. Perkin*-: off! e~* of I the Seventh District Federation of
COATS
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100 NEW SPRING DRESSES Summer Silks in be) : iful pastel shades. Frinted Georgettes and nr Printed Crepe., bought to sell for $16.75, $19.75, $22.75. \ *'9 Anniversary Special,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mrs. Edward Franklin White
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Clubs and Indiana club women who are chairmen of committees in the national federation. The reception hail at the clubhouse was arranged with palms and flowers at the base of the platform back of the receiving line and on the tea table was a crimson silk Oriental cover writh a large silver basket filled with Japanese lilacs for the centerpiece. Miss Ursula Mathews, harpist, played during the receiving hours. The reception was preceded by an open meeting of the community welf-ire department of the club, at which Charles Brandon Booth of tb.e Big Brother and Big Sister fed eration in New York City, spoke on the Big Brother movement. Mrs. J. W. Moore, chairman of the community welfare department, presided.
DRESSES
Hundreds of clever frocks in Satin. Flat Crepe, Georgette and Printed Crepe; in the newest shades. Formerly ly priced at $39.75, $55 and $29.75.
Tremendous Savings
50 DRESSES
Unbeatable Values. Choice selection of Flannel, Jersey, Crepella and other popular materials; $16.75 and $19.75 values.
DRESSES
Hundreds of Silk Dresses in Mie newest spring shades. Formerly priced at $16.75, $19.75, $22.75.
HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS
PRIZE RECIPES BY READERS
NOTE—The Times will give 51 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed in this column. One recipe is primed daily, except Friday, when twenty are fiven. Address' Recipe Editor of The imes. Prizes will be mailed to winners. ANGEL SPONGE CAKE One and one fourth cups egg whites. (9 to 11 eggs, one cup and two tablespons sugar, one teaspoon cream of tartar, six egg yolks, onehalf cup pastry cake flour (white part), one-half teaspoon of vanilla, for white part; two-thirds cup pastry cake flour for yellow part, one-half teaspoon of- orange flavoring. Beat egg whites until foamy, add salt and cream of tartar, fceat until stiff, not dry, fold in sugar; Divide the mixture into two parts, fold in onehalf cup flour, one-half teaspoon vanilla into one-half; and six beaten egg yolks, two-thirds cup of flour and orange flavoring in other half. Sift flour four of five times. Put in pan by spoonful or as desired and bake in slow oven forty to fifty minutes. Mrs. Claude Logan, Danville, lnd. Announce Music for Club Program Sunday Three musical comedy selections will feature the dinner concert program at the Indianapolis Athletic Club Sunday night. “The Red Mill,” by Herbert; “The Firefly," by Friml, and “Chu Chin Chow,” by Morton, will be given. Two other outstanding numbers composed by Irving Berlin. "What Does It Matter” and his latest production, "Russian Lullaby,” will special numbers. Typical show numbers will include "Look at the World and Smile.” from “Yours Truly”; "Cross Your Heart,” from "Queen High"; "In Araby With You,” from "Criss Cross.” A concert arrangement of "Play Gypsies—Dance Gypsies,” from Countess Maritza. Will be on the program, while symphonic numbers, ‘ Panamana,” by Alford; “Arabian Romance." by Polla, and “AllalVs Holiday Melody” will be produced as played with special arrangement by George Irish, the director. The concert numbers to diversify the piogram will be “Adagio rathetique,” by Godard: “Scarf Dance." Chaminade; "Schon Rosmarin,” by Kreisler. and "Song of India,” by Rimsky Korsakow. LUNCHEON AND PARTY Alvin Hovey W. R. C. No, 196 w ill give a noon luncheon followed by r card party Friday at the home of Mrs. Minnie Bartlett. 3028 N. Capitol A vc. ILI MNI MI SIC \l l The Alumni Association of School 39 will give a silver musicale at the school. Lexington and State Sts., at 8 p. m. Friday.
9 to 15 North Illinois St. Opposite Claypool Hotel
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PATTERNS. FASHION CHATS. RECIPES and DAILY MENUS.
MEN PIQUED BECAUSE THEY BOSS NO LONGER Mrs. Ferguson Recalls the Days When Males Sat on Top of the World and Women Were Meek.
By Mrs. Waller Ferguson A reformer who sees tragic signs I of degeneration in the country says that the chief thing wrong is that women are trying to dominate everything. And succeeding, we'd say. Yet what's particularly wrong with that? The women are only getting the i men right where we used to be. It’s no fun playing the'same game all the time. And the men. if we remember correctly and can read, were quite complacent when they did all the dominating. Few, if any, rose to j protest that unjust state of things. I When father was cock of the walk | and general boss of the world, things were fine. Those were the good old I days. God was in 11 is heaven; all I was right with the world, j The men could get divorces for I adultery then, but their wives | could not. They could deceive and ! ruin young girls and suffer no sad j consequences. They could desert | their families and have no law on : their trail. They could have a whole j flock of illegitimate children and lose jno social caste. They paid no alij mony and brooked no interference in their political games. ; They held the family purse, and ! if mother asked for a dime every ! three weeks there would be a great j hullabaloo. The men ian the businesses. the homes, the schools, the I country. They sat on top of the world. Women, of course, did not have I things quite so fine. They were ] obliged* to get a husband by hook or I crook or spend the rest of their ; lives working as a poor relation or j taking in ’boarders. They were merely females and had to put up j with things. But when women were thus kept in their proper place, you heard no chirp out of the men. But how I they do hate the taste of their own i medicine; Father can remain out until the I dawn and is highly indignant if Is | asked to give an account of himself, hut let mother 'be missing until 10 i p. nt. and the country is going to | the dogs. Dad can drink until he i must hang to the lamppost, but let I mother to take a cocktail and Belzej bub has u=. Father can smoke like a chimney, but let mother have a rigaret and the bulwarks of civilization are failing. Father may have
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a battalion of sweethearts, but let mother flirt and the world is lost. The men would be funny if they were not pitiful. It is going to take a lot of hard bumps before they realize that never again can they hold women to one standard of behavloV while they practice anothei If they w-ant us to be good, they arc going to have to be good, too. Theatre Society to Take Over Show The Little Theatre Society ha taken over the selling of the lowei floor of Keith's for the Stuai i Walker production "Lazy Bones, on May 9. Mrs. Everett M. Schofield is general chairman in charge of the ticket sales and Miss Helen Coffey assisted by Miss Virgin! Lucas, will sell candy in the lobby during the performance. MisMarian Hilgcnberg is directing thr ushers and .Airs. James McDill Faris bas charge of the sale of boxes.
PERSONAL ITEMS
I Mrs. Tlarry Henderson and Mrs Bessie Sheaffer of Delphi are the guests of Mrs. Henderson's aunt. Mrs. Lewis E. Brown, and Mr. Brown, 4349 Carrollton Ave., and are ‘attending the Grand Chapter of Eastern Star convening here this week. Air. and Mrs. Carl Staudt and son Carl Jr. are visiting with Air. and Airs. Frank R. Roy, Ft. Wayne lnd., formerly of this city. The Roberson Club will meet this evening nt the Spink-Arms.
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