Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 193, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1929 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Officials of D.A.R. Will Be Honored Mrs. Harriet V. Rigdon, Wabash, and Mrs. Horace G. Murphy, Muncie, will be honor guests at a luncheon to be given Thursday at the Propylaeum by Mrs. James L. Gavin, national vice-president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Guests with the hostess and the honor guests will be Mrs. F. Ellis Hunter, regent of Caroline Scott Harrison chapter and members of the board of management. Following the luncheon. Mrs. Rigdon, a nominee for the office of national treasurer-general, will speak on “National Defense.” She is vicechairman of the national committee on defense and Mrs. Murphy is chairman of the committee for Indiana. A program of songs will be given by Mrs. James H. Lowry. Hostesses for the social hour which will follow are Mesdames James H. Taylor and William L. Home, assisted by Mesdames Roy Elder Adams, Gavin I. Payne, John J. Madden, Albert Gall, Ernest De Wolf Wales, Quincy A. Myers, Joel Whittaker. Charles F. Voyles, James B. Nelson, J. M. Lochhead, James M. Ogden, Merritt A. Potter, Pittsburgh, and Marriettn Tweedy Vehr, Danbury, Conn. The annual New Year’s day reception of the chapter was held from 3 to 5 Tuesday afternoon at the chapter house.

Family Menu

BY SISTER MARY BREAKFAST Orange juice, cereal, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Spinach with stuffed eggs, baking powder biscuits, pear preserves, rice putting, lemonade. DNNER Roast chicken with celery stuffing, sweet potatoes, apples, baked corn, jellied cabbage and pineapple salad, vanilla' mousse with chocolate sauce, milk, coffee. The dinner menu suggested is ideal for a small-family dinner to celebrate some festive occasion. A clear soup or fruit cocktail can be used to begin the meal if a more elaborate menu is wanted. Celery Stuffing Four cups stale bread crumbs 1 cup boiling water, % oup melted butter, 1 tablespoon minced onion. 1 tablespoon minced parsley, 1 cup finely chopped celery, ltt teaspoons wait, 1 tablespoon poultry seasoning. 34 teaspoon pepper. The bread should be two days old and the crumbs made medium coarse. Put into a large mixing bowl and pour boiling water over .them- Let stand 20 minutes and squeeze out excess moisture. Add melted butter and stir lightly with a. fork. Mix onion, parsley and celery and add to crub mixture. Season with salt, pepper and poultry seasoning and mix thoroughly Progressive Dinner A New Year’s eve progressive dinner party was given by Mr. and Mrs. Willis N. Coval, 3614 East Fall Creek boulevard. The guests included Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Alexander. Bloomington; Captain G. C. Cleaver, Bloomington; Captain and Mrs. J. C. Blizzard, Captain and Mrs. Frank Barber. Ft. Benjamin Harrison, and Mr. and Mrs. Warren Smith. Scotch Plaid Printed jersey now grows Scotch and appears in stunning Scotch plaid patterns. One in tans and browns, with a dash of orange and red, is made diagonally of the* cloth, with pipings of orange. Wed Fifty-one Years Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Staver and Mr. and Mrs. Simon Frantz, both of Wabash county, celebrated their fifty-first wedding anniversaries New r Year's day at. their homes.

Famous Recipe For Stopping a Severe Cough

You'll be pleasantly surprised when mu make up this simple home mixture and try it lor a distressing cough or chest cold. It takes but a moment to mix and costs little, but it can be depended upon to give quick and last* leg relief. Get 2% ounces of Pinex from any druggist. Pour this into a pint bottle; then 611 it with plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey. The full pint thus made costs no more than a small bottle of ready-made medicine, yet it is much more effective. It is pure, keeps perfectly and children love its pleasant taNte. This simple remedy has a remarknble three-fold action. It goes rwht to the scat of trouble, soothes away the inflammation, and loosens the germladen phlegm. At the same time, it is absorbed into tbe blood, where it acts directly upon the bronchial tubes and thus helps inwardly to throw off the whole trouble with surprising ease. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, is a refined, palatable form, and known as one of the greatest healing agents fur severe coughs, chest colds and bronchial troubles. . Do not accept a substitute for Pinex. It is guaranteed to give prompt relied or money refunded. —Advert i semen t.

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SPORTS CLOTHES SEEN AT RESORTS

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A blue, white and Beige sports outfit has its hand-blocked overblouse striped diagonally with blue and white and its white skirt gathered. A gold-yellow sweater, embroidered in white silk, tops a white kasha skirt with box pleats. Unusual skirt pleats, novelty striping and anew tic effect distinglish a beige, yellow and green outfit.

Entertains With Luncheon Party at Brennan Home Mrs. W. H. Blodgett entertained with a holiday luncheon bridge party at the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. P. Brennan. 37 West Twenty-first street, Monday afternoon. She was assisted by Mrs. Brennan and Mrs. Sylvia Buchanan. The house was decorated throughout with clusters of poinsettias. At serving time a table was arranged with poinsettias. Guests included Mrs. C. M. Gordan and her house guest, Mrs. E. J. Molin, Tulsa. Okla.; Mesdames Matt Harris, Alex Goodwin, W. H. Lewis, Bert Burk. W. H. Welsh. W. H. Schell. Henry Roberts, Effie Rodgers. Ernest Wysong, W. F. Brant, Arthur Car, Nellie R. Beieson, E. L. Burnett. Arthur Harms and Albert Johnson.

Woman’s Day

BY ALLENE SUMNER The Rev. M. J. Binns and the Rev. Mrs. J. B. Binns, or however one manages those titles, preach in the same church. He holds forth hi the pulpit of Markham Square church, London, Sunday mornings, and his good wife spreads the tidings in the same pulpit at the evening service. We are hearing more such stories all the time of husbands and wives working in harness together. And the participants are generally younger couples rather than middleaged ones. Which means several things; first, that more professions are open to women than ever before; second, that men are becoming less scared, perhaps, of the capable, brainy woman, and that marriages are more apt to be based on similarity of interest than they once were. n n a "'But I Won't Die” Nobody ever really believes that he or she will really die. This unoriginal bit of philosophy is revived by the story of the five women who, facing certain death from radium poisoning incurred by painting luminous watch dials, were awarded SIO,OOO each and the blunt verdict that their days were numbered. But each of the five is continuing to live her more or less ordinary life much as anyone would live who, suddenly possessed of SIO,OOO, expected to go on enjoying life indefinitely. They have bought cars and radios, lifted mortgages from homes, taken trips, bought trust bonds and luxuries for their families. A strange thing, this human nature! Powerful and beautiful, too! nun T. N. T. “I Don't* Want to Bea Mother,” writes one Margery Lawrence in the Cosmopolitan, thereby shaking the red rag. She shakes it some more as she continues—“l represent a type of woman increasingly common in the w r orld of today—the frankly nonmaternal. I think I may stand as a specimen of all-round normal modern womanhood. And I bluntly declare there is nothing whatever wrong with me. mentally, morally, or physically, hi not wanting a child. “It is not remarkably clever to reproduce your kind, nor does it necessarily alter or improve a woman's character, though, to listen to some of these complacent mothers, one would think that the arrival of a baby must prove a palliative to every ill—an immediate solution to all life’s problems! - U S tt No Cure-All “Tire old idea that a baby was a sort of divine pomade that immediately would spread bland happiness and content over the sore places in life—and glue together two people who were drifting apart!— this idea, futile and stupid and untruthful as it is, still persists with nauseating longevity. “The truth is that a baby is a wedge forcing two people apart fully as often as it knits them together. and it is a nuisance as often ; as a joy.” * n Trouble Brciving Surely enough has been quoted to prove the trouble which this bold woman who does not even write anonymously, is storing up for herself. Tire very vehemence of it proves, too, that she knows she’s on the defensive, striking back at those

BY HENRI BENDEL For NEA Service NEW YORK, Jan. 2.—Probably no type of clothes designed for Palm Beach and other southern resort wear attracts the attention that sports clothes do. They hold their strategic position because they can be worn most universally. By that I mean that more people, in more parts of the country, need the sports type of frock than for instance, the bathing suit or the filmy chiffons for formal afternoon .affairs. Moreover, in recent years, sports clothes have had a tremendous influence on the whole world of fashion. Everyone remembers the advent of the kerchief topping a formal evening gown. Cocktail jackets had their origin in sports cardigans. Therefore the details of style that couturiers eyolve for sports clothes are watched very minutely, not only by fashion experts but by individuals who follow the style. New- Stripes Are Novel Novelty stripes are being used in profusion n early spring sports things. Not collegiate stripes and .not broad, uninteresting even stripes. But some kind of a combination of varying sized stripes, stripes and dots, stripes and checks. Much is made of coloi- against a less bright background. Much is made of blouses, ind many times the overblouse or sweater is the colorful part of a ccstume. Skirts on the whole are full. Novelty pleating is used a great deal. Some skirts introduce the idea of plain, unadorned gathers, as anew way to get fullness. Since gathers have been out for many years, they do bring a certain sense of fresh novelty with their return. A gathered white crepe skill., in one of the new styles, is topped by an overblouse of hand-blocked silk in a modernistic pattern of blue, white and beige. A diagonal stripe of blue and biege heighten tht colorfulness of this overblouse, with a similar diagonal pattern up the sleeves and across a pocket on one side. A scarf of ulue adds its bit. too.

Small Hat Favored Topping this sports frock is a little beige hat from Rose Valois with a draped banding of blue and beige chiffon. This hat is indicative of the small hat’s favor this winter, provided it is svelt and smart. Bege faille, striped in yellow and green fashions, a charming little two-piece frock. The skirt’s deep pleats are curved and stitched to fashion a long yoke effect and its lower edge has a sweet banding of the green with narrow stripes of the yellow’ above it. This novelty striping circles the overblouse and the cuffs. The square neck has an interesting tie treatment, the tie ends really being an extension of the neck's banding. A beige bangkok hat has bandings of the colors in suede, exactly matching to complete the scheme. Sweater suits this spring are apt to combine knitted sweaters with silk or fine wool skirts and often take their matching cardigans in the skirt's fabric. A stunning gold-yellow and white sports suit has a box-pleated skirt of white kasha and its sweater emIwoidered in stripes and novelty c !°mond figures in white silk. The sweater simulates a little tie, by its embroidery. Yellow hosiery and w’hite shoes are suitable accessories while a little white ballibuntl hat is banded in the gold-yellow. McPhed ran-Mciddock Mr. and Mrs. Daniel McPhed ran; 826 North Grant avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Mabel McPhedran. to Wirt Ford Maddock. Indianapolis, son of D. L. Maddock, Lafayette. The wedding will take place Sunday afternoon. Jan. 27. at the home of the bride's pai’ents. Happy Birthday In an age when so many folk'} forget anniversaries, an easy way to give your friends pleasure is to take anew calendar, go through it with your book of birthdays and write the name of your various friends and relatives over their birth dates. A card that reaches one on that day of days never fails to please. who have called her selfish, "unnatural.” She might have proved her point more effectively if. instead of being on the defensive, she had tried to ..how just how the world needs and uses the childless woman as well as the mother. But there's T. N. T. in these pages and we wouldn't want the job of opening the editor's mail for a while!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

W. C. T. U. Meets All Day at Home of Mrs. Foreman Mrs. Harry L. Foreman, 3835 Washington boulevard, was hostess today for the regular monthly meeting of the Meridian W. C. T. U. The meeting opened at 10 this morning with a general business session and parliamentary drill led by Mrs. A. C. Hawn. Luncheon was served by Mrs. James C. Jay and her assistants. The secod part of the program was opened with community singing. directed by Mrs. L. E. York. Devotions were led by Mrs. J. W. House An address was made by Albert Stuir.p His subject was “Law Enforcement.” Payment of annual dues was made and New Year’s greetings extended. Mrs. Martha Gipe, president, presided.

FELT ORNAMENT

Brown bakou with strips of felt making the ornament at the side in the slash, fashions this smart hc.t for southern resorts. Study Group to Meet H. A. Henderson will speak before members of the Book-a-Month study group of the literature department of the Woman's DepartClub on “Some Phases of Our Reading,” Jan. 23, at 10 a. m. The talk will be demonstrated with ianter nslides. A discussion luncheon will follow’, in charge of Mrs. Franklin Dickey. A literature questionnaire will be conducted by Mrs. Arthur P. Thomas. Sixtieth Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. John A. Barr, Greenfield, celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary Monday at their home w ith open house for relatives and friends. They have been residents of Greenfield fifty-five years of their married life. They are members of the Christian church. Mr. Barr is a member of the Hancock Masonic lodge. Writer to Be Guest McCready Huston, South Bend, novelist and short story writer, who spoke before members of the literature department of the Woman’s Department Club this afternoon on “Attitudes in the Novel,” will be entertained this evening by the Writers' Club of Indiana at a banquet at the Spink-Arms hotel. He will read an original short story. “The Tenth Sunday After Christmas.” ✓ • • Holidfiy Party Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Harrison. Noble street, entertained with a Christmas party at their home Saturday evening. Christmas decorations were used throughout the house. Bunco was played during the evening, prizes being won by Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Tingle. Guests were Messrs, and Mesdames James Griffin, Wilbur Lovenger, A. F. Major and Aid red Tingle. Ankle Socks Angora ankie socks are making a real place for themselves in the current mode. Worn over silk stockings in the north, they are a winter accessory. Worn on bare legs at southern resorts, they are indispensable for sports.

lOR fifty Years Cnticnra Soap and Ointment have afforded the nmt, (weatael and Ml Ji> factory method of oaring for the dh ad fcafe.

Nine Rules A bout Boys by Sub-Deb BY MARTHA LEE Ever since the girls have been writing in to find out just what sort of a girl goes over bigger and longer with the boys, I have been wondering why no boy wrote in to find out what qualities girls like most in boys. Either they don t care and therefore are not worried about it, or else they already know. That’s a peculiar thing about the way things work out. It seems like the more a person tries the less near the goal he gets, which goes to prove that, like a marcel, an attitude simply must at least appear natural or it’s terrific. And that seems to be the main trouble with girls. They go out with the boys. They want the girls to be gay and frivolous and carefree and modem. So what do the girls do but put on that disguise. When the affair wears off. they start going with other boys. These boys want them intellectual, w’ell read, interesting. And the poor girls immediately dive from the make-up tox down to the library and read so much in such a short time that they contract astigmatism. What the boys want, of course, is to mold every girl they come in contact with, to their idea of what a girl should be. And. the girls are foolish enough to fluctuate, first from this disguise to that, just to please a man and maybe, if they’re lucky, land a husband. But the boys? Do they worry about what a girl would like them to be? Nine times out of ten and that’s giving a small margin—they aren’t even interested. Their attitude is just this: If you don’t like me the way I am, it’s just too bad, but what are you going to do about it? I’m me, just the way lam acting, and if I change I will be fooling you anyway, so what’s the point? However, one girl, who has been studying up on what is the latest wrinkle in popularity, has writtep. the points that a very sub-deb person likes best in a boy. Dear Miss Lee—l am a constant Trader of your column and have found it very interesting. Os course, being a girl, I was interested in the letters about what qualities a boy likes most to have his best girl possess. No one has asked me to do thi, but I have decided to tip the boys off to a few good points that they might acquire to improve their stock. I am a girl IS and as they say, it won't be long now until I'll be going around with boys. And while X have been waiting to set old enough to run around I have been looking around. Here’s a set of rules that might be used to advantage. Always be on time for a date. Never keep a girl waiting. Do not scold her if she keeps you waiting. Always pay her a compliment when with

Always introduce her to your triends. Ask her where she wants to go. when you take her any place. If she refuses you, give her tht benefit of the doubt. She probably really has another date. Always be courteous. Do not drink in her presence or ask her to smoke. Better still, do not drink at all. and she will think a great deal more of you. Never let her know she has all oi your affection. Let her think she has a wee bit to win yet. These are from observing uny elders. ONE OF THE MOB. That’s a pretty good set of rules, but it certainly gives the girl all the breaks. For instance, why should a boy always be on time for a date, but if the girl is late, say nothing about it? It doesn’t seem to mean it would sever relationships if both be late, if you must, and neither say anything about it. A friendship should be understanding enough .and strong enough to cope with such situations. The way I feel about iron-bound rules is this: There are more exceptions to the rules in this world than there are rules. The rules are made to discriminate what would be nice. The exceptions are what really exist. ‘MERIDIAN HILLS CLUB HOLDS OPEN ; HOUSE Members of Meridian Hills Country Club entertained with their second annual open house on New Year's day. The clubhouse was embellished throughout with holiday decorations. A tea table was centered with a bowl of red roses and lighted with red tapers in silver holders. The entire service was of silver. Mrs. W. D. Gatch and Mrs. Ed W. Harris poured. They were assisted in the dining room by daughters of club members. The committee in charge of arrangements included Messrs, and Mesdames A. D. Hitz, Harold E. Sutherlin, E. W. Harris and Dr, and Mrs. W. D. Gatch. Opens 1929 Tournament The Altar Society of St. Roch’s church will hold the first of its 1929 tournament card parties in St. Roch’s hall. 3600 South, Meridian street. Sunday afternoon and evening. Mrs. Frank Marien is hostess, assisted by Mesdames Gordon Clark, Roy Mayer. Frank Kretzer, George Mock, Frank Gordon, Richard Whalen and Robert Schnyder. A special supper will be served from 5 to 7 p. m. Free transportation will be provided from the South Meridian car line.

BUILD RESISTANCE It is only as resistance is broken down and die system is weakened that germs bring forth their fruitage of infittenxa, grippe or other ailment*. Keeping weU> nourished is your sorest protection. SCOTTS EMULSION OF PURE VTTAMIN-RICH COOHLJVKR OIL is good insurance against weakness. It fortifies > be system and helps build up a strong wall of resistance to keep infection off. If you would know the joy of strength and power to resist that comes from a W*Unourished body—take Scott’s Emulsion, .frrtta iiTnaWMaafci’d, ■ fc M

CLUB MEETINGS J THURSDAY

Mrs. M. A. Baltzer, 429 East Fortyninth street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Thursday Lyceum Club at her home. The Aftermath Club will meet at the home of Mrs. C. S. Way. 3347 Park avenue. Mrs. John Sink and Miss Elizabeth Cooper will present t v 9 program. Members of the North Side Study Club will be entertained at the home of Mrs. Howard Galey, 2206 Ashland avenue. Mrs. Omar Woods will be assisting hostess. The Ladies Federal Club will hold its regular meeting at the home of Mrs. M. F. Higgins, 936 North Oxford street. Mrs. E. E. Files, 3037 Boulevard place, will entertain numbers of the Pierian Study Club. Mesdames T. D. Hoover, P. A. Randall and C. R. Lewis will present the program. Cornelia Cole Fairbanks chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will hold a meeting at the Propylaeum. Mesdames Edgar H. Evans, Albert Rabb, Henry I. Browning and Henry Bliss will be hostesses.

YOUR CHILD How to Subdue Little Despot

BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Often there will be one child in the family who will take the lead—usually the oldest—and become intolerably bossy over the rest. This is probably more often the case where families are large and the oldest child has been a sort of mother’s assistant. One mother said to me recently, “I don’t know what to do with Irene. She’s getting absolutely beyond my control. I don't want to break her spirit, but I can’t have her going on the way she is. She lords it over the other three children continually, until poor Louise can't call her soul her own.” She Was Right I had an opportunity to observe both children. Irene was 10; Louise was 8. It soon was very evident that what mother said was true. Both were charming children, but two entirely different spirits looked out of Irene's bright blue eyes and Louise's appealing brown ones. I watched them playing. When Irren said come, Louise went. If she didn’t snap out of it in a hurry, too, Irene called her a name or gave her a push. Here was tyranny. The worst of it was that when Irene chose to be kind, her sister was pitifully grateful. Everybody was quiet as long as the little despot was having her own way. Just as the mother was afraid of breaking the older child's spirit, that young tyrant was doing her best, and succeeding, in subjugating her sister. “What would you do?” asked their mother. “Shall I take Irene in hand and punish her?” Separate Them “No. don’t do that* It would be a long war and. after all, there is nothing gained by trying to rob a child of a strong will. Divert it, that's all. Keep her busy with other tilings. Get some outside interests for that will of hers to dig its teeth into. “Keep them apart. Give Irene her own room, if possible. Hunt up outside friends for her. friends she can’t bulldoze. And see that Louise has outside friends, too, different from Irene’s. Don’t have them take music from the same teacher. If it could be arranged, I'd send them to different schools. I’d leave as little room for comparison as possible and try to overcome that inferiority complex of Louise’s.” And this is the advice I would give to all mothers, whenevr they have boys or girls. Keep the dominating one very busy, and keep him apart, but don't try to “master” him or break his spirit. Entertains for Son Mrs. Ovid-Butler Jameson, 1035 North Pennsylvania street, entertained New Year’s eve with a dinner party in honor of her son. Booth Tarkington Jameson, preceding the Princeton Triangle Club’s musical comedy “Zuider Zee.” Covers were laid for twelve at a table decorated with a centerpiece pf red roses and lighted with red tapers. Woodstock New Years Eve Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman, 706 West Tenth street, entertained Monday evening with a dinner party in hondr of their grandson, Coleman Atkins, at the Woodstock Club. Covers were laid for fourteen guests. Among other dinner parties given at the club was one attended by Dr. and Mrs. J. O. Ritchey, Messrs, and Mesdames Emmett Hall. Thomas Harvey Cox. Walter Beiling, J. T. McDermott and Wendell Sherk. Newsy Letters A woman, famous for her interesting letters, keeps a series of large manila envelopes in her desk, each having the name of a correspondent. Every time she sees an item that would interest one of them, she clips it and sticks it into his or her envelope until her next letter.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for sr N r p,t - 2 68 5 Size Street City Name

2fe&s

FETCHING NEW APRON

It's so attractive! Young! Flattering! It will make a ' charming gift—a gift that will please the most critical. The deep kilted plaits across front of the two-piece skirt; the bow-tied hipline, that gives a swathed effect to bodice, that is opened under the arms, to give plenty of freedom for movement, gives it the appearance of a smart wash frock. The applied bands of neckline, supply color contrast. It shows how utterly smart it can be in /printed pique with plain selffabric in deepest tone of print. Dimity, printed sateen, cliambray, linen, and novelty cotton crepes also practical for style No. 2688, designed in small, medium and large size. The medium size can be made with 23s yards of 40-inch material with •Is yard of 27-inch contrasting. 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. * /

GIVES BRIDGE FOR FORMER RESIDENT Miss Ruth N. Mers'hon, Boston, Mass., formerly of Indianapolis, was the honor guest Monday afternoon, at a bridge party given by Mrs. Ruth Quinn Cave at her home, 4106 Byram avenue. Decorations and appointments were in Christmas colors. Guests with Miss Mershon were Mesdames Alice Morrow, Lilly G. Rice. Statia Paddock Nicholas, Julia David Shaheen, Sue Mershon Ralph, Walter Metzler and Lucille Cave Buckner; Musses Ada Crozier and Dorothy Gaily. Luncheon for Auxiliary The members of the Southern Club Auxiliary will be entertained at a 12:30 p. m. luncheon Friday at the home of Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, 3134 North Meridian street.

O^ljijßOVE th Chnmed from ( pesh Omm Big Indexes—Easy on the Eyes ♦ BICYCLE CONGRESS PLAYING CARDS

iJormiuifc 81-ue Bird Store lit <57 BLUE BIRD DISHES OIVE-N AW/Cf WcrrH Vo xrm. PUjaosAsu op tAST 'WASft

Expert Truss Fitting at 129 W. Wash. St. Store Abdominal Supports aad S boulder Braces HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUGS

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.JAN. 2, 1939]

Matching of 1 Coat and Car Latest Whim Bit tinted Pres* NEW YORK. Jan. 2.—lt you are the possessor of a motor car and of a leather coat (and the possession of the first implies a need for the second), they should, of course, match. The leather coat, long a foreign favorite' has at last made a dent in American clothes consciousness and many women have awakened . to the comfort and chic of such a coat in its proper environment. A leather coat is just as much at home in a motor as a chow is on the front seat of a limousine, and really much more useful. Matching one's coat to one's car is by no means unfeasible and presents another means of playing the fascinating ensemble game in which women and men, too. have become so expert. Asa matter of fact the color range presented in leathers is in harmony with the complexions of proud motor cars. Shops confirm the notion that coats are not chosen at random, but because of the color of one's car. In some instances berets are shown to match the coat, the beret basque having become a welcome member of the sports family. The advantages of leather coats for motoring, aviation or steamer wear are apparent, since they may be lined in kasha or other lightweight wool or in waterproof silk, smartly tailored, and bought in a rich and varied color range as well as black. Mothers' Club to Meet Members of Zeta Tau Alpha Mother's Club will meet at the chapter house. 329 Hampton drive, at 10 Friday morning to sew. At noon a covered dish luncheon will be served. Mesdames Claude Lett and George Hollins will be hostesses. Mrs. Letts is the pewly elected president. Other officers are: Vice-president. Mrs. H. W. Stuckrneyer; secretary, Mrs. Charles Apostol, and treasurer, Mrs. C, C. Livingston.

Ch ay ter Ann i versary The fifty-first anniversary of Mu chapter. Kappa Kappa Gamma,, will be celebrated a) 6 this evening' by active and alumnae members, with a supper meeting at the chapter house, 4546 North Pennsylvania street. Club Guest Day Members of the Pour Plaisir Club will meet Thursday at, the home of Mrs. Herbert Niebergall, 1516 Burdsall parkway. This will be the annual guest day party. Mesdames Ralph Woods and William Fahey will be assisting hostesses. Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. John H. Brandom, Fortville, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary jtOTfeir home Monday with open house. Their six children and ten grandchildren were present. They have lived ip Port-, ville ever since their marriage in’ 1878. Membership Dance A membership dance and bridge party was held New Year's eve by members of Sigma Phi Gamma sorority at the Lumley tearoom.

ALL SHOULD HAVE PLENTY OF MILK Bones and Teeth of Children and Adults Need Milk in the Diet Two famous nutrition authorities emphasize the need of the human body for the calcium and phosphorus found in milk. Children and expectant or nursing mothers should have from threequarters to one quart of milk a day, according to these authorities, and other adults should have from three-quarters of a pint to a pint of milk a day. These authorities! point out that too little calcium in the. diet retards bone growth, causes rickets, may result in bone deformities, produces poor quality of teeth and lowers vigor and vitality. Whole milk also is rich in phosphorus. Unfortunately there are many people who do not like the taste of milk. For all such people, a delicious milk drink should be made. One mother makes her children eager for milk by giving it to them in milk shakes. “They call one drink a chocolate froth,” she says. “I take a level teaspoon of cocoa and 1% teaspoons of sugar, mix in the bottom of a glass with a few drops of milk until it’s smooth, add a drop or* two of vanilla flavoring, fill the glass with milk and shake it with an ordinary tin shaker. The youngsters are crazy about it.” she goes on to say. "They like it sometimes without the chocolate, just tne vanilla and sugar.” Sugar is Nature’s ideal flavor. ‘‘Help make children drink milk,” says an eminentYood scientist, “by adding chocolate and The Sugar Institute. —Advertisement.

moskinl p chilling on in I 131 W. WASHINGTON

EVANS* FZBAf ** FLOUB AT ALL GROCERS

; Dreaa Up on Cre< Taka 20 Week* to Pay[ 1 THE LIBERT Credit Clothing Go J] j M (forth l*..rlOßl t**r