Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1929 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Auxiliary of Eagles Gives Dinner Party Forty members of the Muncie Eagles auxiliary were guests of the Indianapolis auxiliary Tuesday night, arriving here early in the evening in two chartered busses. A 6 o’clock dinner was served to the guests, with Mrs. Edith Amick, local auxiliary president, in charge. A lodge meeting which opened at 8 o’clock included initiation of six Indianapolis candidates and two lrom Muncie. A program followed, musical numbers being given by Mesdames Bertha Sturgeon, Inez Miller, Frances Pfarr and Gertrude Eversole, Master James O’Keefe and Charles Jones. An exhibition was given by the men’s drill team, directed by Wilbur H. Miller, and also by the women’s team, led by Mrs. Sturgeon. Shortly before the departure of the visitors, refreshments were served by the men. Muncie auxiliary officers and members attending included Mrs. Lottie Bowers, president; Mrs. Opal Walburn, vice-president; Mrs. Ruby Dake, past president; Mrs. Clara Standrook. secretary; Mesdames Nora Sife, Hattie Jackson and Larla Kiss, trustees; Mesdames Georgiana Kirby, Laura Ware, Susan Slates, Cora Fry, Ethel Johnson, Bertha Everson. Wilma Klamberg, Mary E. Kerst, Emma Frohmth, Frances Person, Josephine Tucker, Rebecca Lenon, Carrie Rauch, Harmah Rauch, Dova Eflard. Esther Stiff, Barbara EfTard, Iva McKinney, Orpha Martin, Tressie Shreves, Ettie Mullen, Malfin Mapes, Neemie Dearinger, Dora Edwards, Bessie Klye, Ella Miller, Emma George, Bertha Mayo, Laura Elton, Edna Alexander, Clara Mathews and Irene Plymale. GIVE EXHIBITION AND TEA FOR W\ P. HALL Mrs. W. Pink Hall' will give an exhibition and tea for W. Pink Hall, local artist, who has gained recognition for his oils and water colors. The exhibition will be held from 2 to 5 Thursday afternoon and from 7 to 10 in the evening at the Hall home, 205 East Thirty-fourth street. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. O. T. Behymer and Mrs. H. W. Cochrane.
GIVES PARTY FOR BRIDE
Miss Helen Gardiner entertained with a bridge party arrd miscellaneous shower at her home, 3724 Salem street, Monday night in honor of Mrs. Edward Schneider, who was formerly Miss Thelma Mannix. Guests, with Mrs. Schneider, were Mesdames Frank Dwyer, Paul Jones, John Kelly, Joseph Sexton and Wallace Jones; Misses Esther Brown, Margaret McCarthy, Helen and Hazel Moore, Nell and Margaret Ryan, Helen Markey, Agnes Welch, Marie Gardiner, Raffela Montani, Juanita Mann and Eileen Scanlon. Union of Clubs Meets Members of the executive board of the Irvington Union of Clubs were hostesses for the meeting of the organization this afternoon in the auditorium of George B. Loomis School 85, Oak and Arlington avertues. Eight girls, chosen from the Irvington public and parochial schools to represent the schools in junior civic organization of the Union of Clubs, attended the meeting. Recognition badges were presented by Mrs. James H. Butler, chairman of the union. Church Group Meets Monthly luncheon meeting of the Woman’s Association of the Meridian Street Methodist Episcopal church was held at 12:30 today in the church parlors. Mrs. A. L. Lockridge was chairman, assisted by Mesdames E. L. Barr. Ralph Clark, W. E. Hinkle. E. H. Iglehart, and C. E. Whitehill. Honor State Presidents Mrs. Dorothy S. Pearson, Indiana state president of the American War Mothers, and Mrs. James B. Crankshaw, state regent for the Daughters of the American Revolution, were guests of honor at a breakfast given by members of the Francis Vigo chapter. Vincennes. Tuesday at the Saint Ann hotel. Celebrate Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. John Coyner, Colfax. Perry county pioneers, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary today at the home of Dr. and Mrs. M. M. Seeger. Thomtown. Sunday they will hold open house at their home m Colfax.
**J 111 vk *I T TI HII 1 I lll|l] IY *B 'Lit You can get results—after a fashion—with any old dye; >ut to ' vortc >ou are proud of takes real anilines That's why we put them in Diamond Dyes. They \ contajn f rom three 10 b ve times more than other dyes ,4b on the market! Cost more to make ? Surely. But you fffl get them for the same price as other dyes. JM f, ABSpM Next time you want to dye. try them See how easy J i/ IMB it is to use them. Then compare the results. Note the f absence of that re-dyed look; of streaking or spotting. Wr '-v= See that they take none of the life out of the doth. A W; i1 j Observe how the colors keep their brilliance through A 'jj ni\* wear and washing. Your dealer will refund your UU money if you don’t agree Diamond Dyes are better i The white package of Diamond Dyes is the original |\C / I '*all-purpose” dye for any and every kind of material. / W It will dye or tint silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon or any mixture of materials. The blue package is a special Udye, for silk or wool only. With it you C3n dye your valuable articles of silk or wool with results equal to the finest professional work. Remember this when you buy. The* blue package dyes silk or wool only. The white package will dye every kind of goods, including silk and wool. Your dealer has both packages. Diamond Dyes Easy to use Perfect results AX Aia DRUG STORES T
DINNER PARTY CHAIRMAN
* ▼ */f ''' v ?' :fep ;• :
Miss Mary Reath Sigma Delta Tau sorority will entertain this evening at the Elks Club with a dinner party in honor of members recently initiated. Miss Mary Reath is in charge of arrangements. Guests of honor will be Misses Mary Carr, Mary DeJean, Doris Kays, Loreine Register and Valeria Bodenberg.
GIRL ABOUT TOWN
The Players Club committee, which presented “An Evening in the Nineties,’’ at the Little Theatre Playhouse last week, gave the most hilarious program this year. Webb Adams was chairman and the other members of the committee were Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Hurst, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frost Daggett and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Haerle and Miss Elizabeth Ohr. There were three 'presentations—the prelude, “Seeing New York,” which starred Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mead and Webb himself; the interlude, “The Parchesi Party,” which brought dowfa the house, and the pcstlude, “The Willow 7 Tea Set,” written and produced by Miss Jess Caird-Lothian of London, guest of her sister here, Mrs. Robert Frost Daggett. In “The Parchesi Party” the curtain rose on a game of parchesi in a parlor typical of the gay nineties. There was Mrs. Herman Wolff, Elisabeth Ohr. Helen Osborne and Herman Kothe entirely absorbed in a game of parchesi. Then some one suggested a ballad and Mrs. Wolff in a black and white satin creation of old-fashioned grenadine (I always thought it was a drink, didn’t you?), with funny puffs on the shoulders that looked like epaulets, moved sedately to the piano to accompany Herman Kothe, who has a perfectly charming voice. Then Helen Osborne recited (with gestures) “The Tassels on Her Boots.” While the audience still was helpless with laughter, Elisabeth Ohr and Mr. Kothe took advantage of their feeble condition and sang a duet, “My Mother Was a Lady.” This was followed by “After ■'the Ball,” which brought on a critical condition approaching hysteria. It was as well done as anything we have seen this winter, including Pauline Lord and George Arliss! I just hope someone will ask them to repeat it. I’d like to see it again, too. The dress Elisabeth wore was an opulently modest affair, belonging to Mrs. Charles Wood. It was fashioned of pink brocaded satin with a full skirt and an extravagant train. All the girls wore overpowering pompadours, with little flowers tucked over an ear or eyebrow or something. Among the dancers at. the Propylaeum after the performance were Mr. and Mrs. Perry O’Neal, Mr. and Rush Party Staged Miss Elizabeth Stevens, president of Delta Phi Mu sorority, will be hostess Saturday afternoon at her home, 1541 College avenue, for a rush party to be given by the organization. She will be assisted by Miss Lucile Moore, secretary, and Miss Harriet Minter. treasurer.
BY MARILYNN
Mrs. Earl Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin McNally, Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Pantzer, Mr. and Mrs. Romney Willson, Dr. and Mrs. John Ray Newcomb, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Angell, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. George Kuhn, Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Halverson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lieber, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wild, Mrs. Walker Winslow, Stuart Dean and Stanley Brooks.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind, Enclosed find 15 cents, for which send Pat- oo*y q tern No. O O 6 If Size Street City .......................... Nstmc ••••••••••••••••••••••••
332.9 fjlTtV
The style presented is a smart play dress with bloomers. The front and back have wide box-plaits from shoulder to hem attached to shoulder pieces to form yoke. Select tubfast fabrics for real saving. Nile green chambray with white pique collar and cuffs, printed dimity with < plain harmonizing shade. French blue linen with white, tan jersey with soft brown shade, and English prints are suggested. The pattern of style No. 3329 has miniature picture lessons, a splendid help to the beginner, and a time saver for the woman who has ; learned the economy effected through making frocks for the kiddies. Cuts in size 2, 4 and 6 years. Doll pattern No. 3125, one size only, 15 cents extra. 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. Birthday Dinner Given A dinner, celebrating the sixteenth anniversary of the Excelsior Club, was given Tuesday night, at Page’s farm by members of the organization. Those who attended were Messrs. and Mesdames Charles Clark, Oliver Clark, P. A. Hennesy, Henry Cage, Geoige Hunt, Ray Noblet, Guy Allis, T. B. Wikoff. J. I . Wikoff, W. T. Randall and Will Rosseter. Cards and Lotto at Party Ladies Society of Indianapolis Liederkranz will entertain with a card and lotto party at 2:30 Thursday afternoon at its hall, 1421 East Washington street.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Wife Feels Entitled to Allowance BY MARTHA LEE Marriage is becoming more and more of a business proposition. It used to be that the husband plowed the field and raised the wheat, fattened the calf and killed him for food. But not so in this day and age. The v/heat not only has been sown and reaped, but baked into bread before it ever reacned the household of Mr. and Mrs. The economic status has changed, and household problems have become different. The man still is the head of the house (or should be). He still earns the wherewithal to provide the food and clothing. But the wife has become a partner in the firm. She must handle funds, attend to the spending of a large share of the salary, and account for that which she has spent. The answer, in most cases is a household budget. The silent partner of this firm of Mr. and Mrs. writes in: Dear Miss Lee—My husband, for one reason or another, will not fall into the budget or allowance idea. It semes the most sensible, the most economic plan to me, but he flatly refuses to see where there is any good in it. Asa consequence. I must ask him for every penny to be spent in the house. Groceries, meat, every household item, is bought by my asking him each day for money. Until the time of my marriage, I was financially independent. I bought what I could afford. I resent the idea of asking for every penny. You would think by now he would realize I need a certain sum with which to run the house. But no. Every day I must ask him for money to run the house with, as though it were the first day of our marriage. I have explained to him my ideas on the subject, but he will not listen. What can I do about it? NAN It probably gives him a great deal of satisfaction to have you ask him for money, Nan; a sense of pride and power; a sense of your dependence upon him, that satisfies the eternal vanity of man. Os course, it is much wiser to run your home upon a budget. The fact that you have been a business woman, financially independent, makes the new state of affairs trying, But it can not do you or your home any particular harm to indulge his masculine vanity that much. You are- sensible enough to, see that. n m n One of the greatest faults with us moderns is that we do not want to take up our crosses. We do something, and the moment it shows any signs of being the least bit burdensome, the least bit unromantic, we want to run off, leave it far behind. In other words, the main idea seems to be to shun responsibility. It just can’t be done. It is a responsibility just to exist. And no one is particularly eager to run away from existence. Dear Miss Lee—l ..was married six years ago to the man of my father’s choice. I did, however, love another man. I never have let my husband know I did not love him. Nor have I ever seen the man I loved since my marriage. But I can not get him out of my mind. Recently my husband has been most indifferent to me. I miss the loss of the affection he show'ed me very much. When I make an effort to be affectionate to him, he turns away, as though annoyed. I am hungering for a little attention now. I do not believe in divorce, but this is becoming unbearable. What can I do about it? VERY UNHAPPY. You did pretty well to fool him for six years into believing that you loved him, when you did not. Now, unless I am greatly mistaken, you really do. You married him of your own free will. It was not a case of life or death, whether you married the man your father chose or the one you loved. You would better get busy and chuck the memory of this man you turned down. Settle yourself to pleasing your own husband. Make him happy and contented. Give him real affection, not mere outward signs, that he undoubtedly has detected were false. You have your life mapped out before you. Don’t start making yourself a lot of trouble by taking detours.
Family Menu
BREAKFAST—HaIves of grape fruit, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, spinach with eggs on toast, extra toast, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Hot pot of beans, apple and lettuce salad, brown bread, chilled steamed prunes, milk, tea. DINNER—Roast beef, Yorkshire pudding, mashed potatoes, brown gravy, buttered celery cabbage, canned cherries, spice cake, milk, coffee. Hot Pot of Beans One cup navy beans, U. pound steak, % pound ham, 1 cup canned tomatoes, % cup minced carrot, M cup minced celery, 2 tablespoons minced onion, 1 cup finely diced potato, Hi teaspons salt, J /4 teaspoon pepper, % teaspoon mustard. Wash beans and cover with cold water. Let stand over night. In the morning pour off water. Put meat through food chopper, using fat on the ham. Combine all the ingredients, adding about 4 cups of cold water. Bring to the boiling point and simmer, just below actual boiling point for three hours, With a hearty salad and dessert this can be used for a dinner onepiece meal. E titer tain With Bridge Tea Mrs. E. A. Hunt, 3939 Washington boulevard, will be hostess Thursday afternoon for a bridge tea to be given at her home by the Indiana Indorsers of Photoplays. The hostess will be assisted by Mrs. Francis Summers and Mrs. Harold Mercer. Speaks at Kankakee Mrs. Blanche Chenoweth spoke on “The Fine Art of Pleasing,” before members of the Kankakee Woman’s Club today. Four Pairs The chic wardrobe now must include at least four styles of gloves, ’tis said. They ll are the hand-sewn, wearable glove for daytime street wear; the suede gauntlet with bracelet wrist for afternoon wear; the kid glove with a fancy braided cuff and the evening glove.
CLUB MEETINGS THURSDAY
Mrs. Elizabeth Unger, 2219 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain members of the Thursday Lyceum Club. Mrs. J. A. Taggart will review “Black Valley,” by West. Members of the Ladies’ Federal Club will be entertained at the home of Mrs. W. B. Norris, 1416 West Thirty-fourth street. Mrs. C. A. Shelby and Mrs. H. S. Gudgel will be in charge of the program. Thursday Afternoon Club members will meet at the home of Mrs. J. L. Locke, 434 North Gladstone avenue. Mrs. Grant Timmerman will be the assisting hostess. Chi Rho Zeta Mother’s Club members will meet for a 1 o’clock luncheon at the active chapter house.
SPRING DINNER TO BE GIVEN
Covers will be laid for fifty guests at the spring dinner to be given tonight in Social -hall to employers of members of the industrial department of the Y. W. C. A. Following the dinner, Miss Ruth Ann Sipple will give a short greeting and the department quartet, composed of Misses Vivian Simmons, Fern Bowers, Jeanette Crooks and Irma Day, will present a group of songs. Miss Fern Lyster will be installed as president. Others who will take office with her are: Vice-president. Miss Agnes Steuben; secretary, Miss Eva Crooks, and treasurer, Miss Dixie Tulley. Mrs. Samuel Ashby, president of the board of directors, will preside at installation services. DR. AND MRS. BARNARD TO BE AT INAUGURATION Dr. and Mrs. Harry E. Barnard, 5030 Pleasant Run boulevard, will leave Friday for Washington, D. C., where they will attend affairs being given in connection with the inauguration of Herbert Hoover. They will be guests at the reception to be given Saturday afternoon at the Hoover home for officers of the American Relief Association, established during the war by the food administration. A dinner will be given Sunday by officers of the food administration, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Hoover, at which the Barnards will be guests. t Entertains Bridge Club Mrs. J. P. Coser entertained Tuesday at the Japanese tea room, 3018 Central avenue, with a luncheon bridge party, for members of the North Side Tuesday Bridge Club. Rooms were decorated with bouquets of American Beauty roses. Appointments and decorations were carried out in yellow and gold. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. .Floe Fawkner and Mrs. J. B. Stahlhuth. Covers were laid for sixteen guests. Theater Party Given Members of Zeta Psi Omega sorority entertained with a theater party at English’s Tuesday night in honor of Mrs. Marie Thompson, pledge. Those who attended were Mesdames Nelle Lepere, Lucy Hardy, Edythe Lott, Rosemary Stump and Kathleen Glass; Misses Marjorie Kelly, Marjorie Bracken, Grace Blankenship, Louise Socwell and Kathryn Mansfield. Mrs. Brown to Lecture Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown will lecture on “Sunshine and Shadows in Australia,” under auspices of the health education department of the Y. W. C. A. tonight. Proceeds from the lecture will be used to pay pledges of the department toward world fellowship and the new Phyllis Wheatley Y. W. C. A. branch building. Mrs. W. C. Smith is chairman of. the health education department. Entertains Cleophas Club Mrs. Hugh Lovingfos, 1555 Broadway, was hostess today for a luncheon and 500 party for members of the Cleophas Club. Covers were laid for twelve guests. Special Session Held Alpha chapter, Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, will hold a special business meeting tonight at 8 o’clock at the home of Miss Augusta Dudley, 701 Cottage avenue. Southern Touch Southerners have a way of tucking the last pinch of garlic, about the size of a pea, way inside roasts they are cooking. This gives an indefinable “different” taste that is delicious. More garlic would spoil the elusiveness of the appeal. Golden Wedding Mr. and Mrs. James D. Wilson, Crawfordsville, will entertain with a dinner Wednesday, March 6, in celebration of their fiftieth wedding anniversary.
C^jljovE Churned from*tMhOmm
Nfcrmaafc Blue Bird Store Set of BLUE BIRD DISHES dIVETff . AW/Sf ' Ufjw Vovn. PujaiM jgftfrtolrtS 217-244 EAST
l KO-WE-BA ] m | it Oc£h\ Sold Oni; St Independent Grocer* It ShjJfS KOTHE, WELLS & BAUER CO, Indianapolis /KSgK.
Lindy’s Safe From Gaudy Gold Diggers BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Well, thank goodness, now we can settle down again. Lindbergh is engaged and we won’t have to worry any longer for fear he will be nabbed by some worthless golddigger. In a measure, every American woman is Lindy’s mother. So far as we know him, he typifies so perfectly w'hat every woman would like a son to be. The fact that he has seemed heart-whole and fancy free since his trans-Atlantic flight has bothered us a bit. But sighs of relief now are going up from the newspapers. We are all happy because Lindy has escaped some beautfiul jade of the music hall type and selected a fine, sensible, intelligent girl to marry. But, of course, he would do that. If you will notice, practically all intelligent men who are unmarried up to the age of 27 or 28 pick out intelligent women for their wives It is only very young boys without experience, extremely old men in their dotage, and simpletons who marry empty-headed gold-diggers. By this I don’t mean to say that intellectual men always marry intellectual women. But they do marry those who are home-makers and economists with plain practical sense. Very few of them are tied up with raving beauties. For the day of the lovely dumbell is passing, so far as marriage is concerned. In our moments of bitterness we may believe that men are not progressing mentally, but that’s not true. They fall less freuently for the Florid and nitwit type and marry women who are more nearly their mental equals. Witness the great numbers of our literary set where both members of the family write and write well. Don’t fool yourself that there are many vastly intellectual men who are miserably married to fools. It’s the fools of the male sex who select their kind with whom to mate. Lindbergh, being what he is, never could have bestowed his name upon an unworthy woman. May he steer for them as straight a course to happiness as he did to Paris!
■MAKING HOMES BEAVTIFUL-
Hepplewhite Furniture Is Notable for Its Grace
I ppl
Here is the seventeenth of the series of articles on “MAKING HOMES BEAUTIFUL” which has been written for The Times and NEA Service by William H. Wilson, vice president of the American Furniture Mart and an acknowledged authority on interior decoration and period furniture. BY WILLIAM H. WILSON Written for Times and NEA Service The gates to the hall of fame which opened to admit Thomas Chippendale, parted again to allow George Hepplewhite to be seated beside him. To these men, modem furniture designers owe most of their inspiration. Hepplewhite’s creations were lighter and freer from ornate display than Chippendale’s. His influence was one of refinement and elegance. Distinctive of the Hepplewhite designs are the chairbacks, made in the form of shields, hoops, interlacing hearts, and ovals, always fastened to the upward sweep of the back legs. Legs differed from Chippendales, for they were always straight, the cabriole form never being used, and the typical ending of the Hepplewliite leg is the spade foot. Hepplewhite made frequent use of painting and paneling; he used veneers, and light delicate carving. He made some use of inlay, but not
EVAN S' EW.KE AT ALL GROCERS
MB Ballroom ae Berry Dancing Special Rate Open Until a AWh March 18 Av Regularly Sl2—Now 12 Class Lessons Phone Lincoln 5906 Days
GIVES DINNER FOR VISITOR
Honoring Mrs. James G. McNett, Sea Cliff. L. 1., who is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meed, Miss Helen Franke. 333 Blue Ridge road, entertained with a dinner bridge at her home Tuesday night. Covers were laid for the hostess, Mrs. McNett; Mesdames Wilbur Appel, Charles Stuart' Gerald Kennedy, Wilbur Schwier, Harley Cooper, Robert Pence, Theodore Allebrandi, Kenneth Rosenberger and Irvin Chaple; Misses Ruth Hoover, Mildred Heenan and Katherine Zwicker.
WILL WED
■gap : •
—National Photo. Miss Emma Huebschman Mr. and Mrs. John L. Huebschman, 4313 English avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Emma Marie Margaret Huebschman, to R. Vaughn Chapman, son of Mrs. Estella Chapman, 441 North Rural street. The wedding date has not been set. Sorority Meeting Slated Members of Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Virginia Swain, 519 North Denny avenue.
A Hepplewhite bedroom
nearly so much as Sheraton, his contemporary. The Hepplewhite curve is convex. Becaus of its lightness, grace, and good taste, it is suitable for tL. home of today. The Hepplewhite suite most often used is in the bedroom, and dining rooms offer another place where it may be shown to advantage. Hepplewhite’s w r ork, while created in the same age as that of Chippendale, is an improvement on that of the man who has received major tribute for the development of furniture of the time. Like Chippendale. Hepplewhite took French designs, but the former followed Louis XVI with his ornateness, while the latter improved the delicate subtlety of Louis XV. A bright red taffeta scarf has Its wide border embroidered like a flower garden in delicate posies In biscuit, white, black, lavender, pale green and yellow.
4 r-' EAT AND EXERCISE ENOUGH Eat varied foods enjoyabiy sweetened\ and exercise
"People ought to get out into the air," said a famous health authority, when we asked him to give us the facts about exercise and diet. "Recommend walking,” he said, "and golf, tennis and fishing—anything that gives people enjoyable exercise in the open.” “Exercise that is a duty,” he said, "becomes a hardship and is soon abandoned. Have an outdoor hobby that takes you outdoors each day, and gives you pleasure.” HVe believe that enjoyment is good for us,” he said. “Enjoyment tends to improve the whole physioloey of the body.” Discussing the subject of diet, this health authority said, "Sugar is the vehicle of roughage, mineral salts and fruit vitamins. Sugar modi fies the fruit acids and makes the fruits palatable. At least 90% of constipation is due to a lack of roughage. Eat a raw and a cooked vegetable, also a raw and a cooked or canned fruit each day. Rotate them with season, price and taste.” So we see that sugar and common sense are at the foundation of good eating. Eat healthful foods daily, sweetened for enjoyment. Most foods are more delicious and nourishing with sugar. The Sugar Institute. —Advertisement.
.FEB. 27, 1929
Sunnyside Luncheon Party Held Mrs. J. A. Diggle. 2515 College avenue, entertained today with a luncheon-bridge for members of the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside. The party was a Washington birthday affair. The house was decorated throughout with bouquet* of red carnations. A crystal bowl of red roses centered the dining room table and the small tables were decorated with miniature cherry trees and lighted with red tapers in crystal holders. Covers were laid for more than a hundred guests. The guests were received by the hostess and Mrs. Marguerite Ent, dressed as Martha Washington, and Miss Louise Smith, Cincinnati, as George Washington. Mrs. Diggle was assisted by Mesdames Fred Uhl, Frank Bird. Donald Graham. Jack Daugherty, T. R. Lewis and George James. Initiation Services Members of Alpha Chi chapter, Sigma Alpha sorority, entertained Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Ralph T. Simon, 1326 East Market street, at which time the following girls were initiated: Misses Elizabeth Wiley, Winifred Wiley. Marion Davis, and Wilhelmina Oeffler. Mrs. A. F. Simon assisted the hostess. Other guests were Mrs. Ralph Harrington and Miss Marcella Walther. Joint Banquet Is Held Members of the Girls' Federation class and the Christian Men Builders of the Third Christian church will hold a joint banquet at 6:30 tonight at the church. Seventeenth street and Broadway. A program of song and entertainment will take the group on a tour around the world. The program is in charge of Mr. and Mrs. James Jay. Adviser to Be Honored Miss Cora Stierwalt, 1122 Reisner street, will be hostess for a party to be given tonight by members of Beta chapter, Phi Tau Delta sorority, in honor of their new advisor, Miss Dorothy Grimes.
if^AD of exercise
Too busy for exercise or games! Don’t worry! Learn the simple secret, millions know—of the exerciser in the vest-pocket box for a dime! Cascarets give your bowels as much exercise as they get from an hour with the punching bag. Oils, salts and ordinary laxatives don’t act like Cascarets. These things only produce mechanical or chemical action. You have to keep taking them because they weaken your bowels. Cascarets strengthen the bowels. They are made from Cascara Sagrada, which stimulates the peristaltic action and exercises the bowel muscles. Nothing else does this. That’s why ’Cascarets give lasting relief from those symptoms of sluggish bowels, such as headaches, biliousness, bloating, sallov; skin, indigestion, no appetite, etc. Sales of over 20 million boxes yearly prove their merit!
CASCARETS STRENGTHEN THE BOWELS HANDY THEY WORK HINGED-TOPR/M/F4 WHILE YOU TIN BOXES SLEEP
HELPED BY CARDUI FOR FORTY YEARS Ohio Lady Tells How She Gained In Strength After Long Suffering From a Weak, Run-Down Condition. Lebanon. Ohio—Mrs. J. B. Hollon, of this place, has used Cardiff for forty years, occasionally when needed, and here is what she says about this long-established medicine: “I suffered a long time from weakness. I was run-down and not able to go. I could not do my work, and it wgs hard for me to do anything around the house. “I was so nervous I could not sleep well, and I would get upset. I had so much headache, and at times my back hurt so I could hardly stand it. “I read about Cardui, and got some at the store to take. I found it helped me so much I took it for several months. “After taking several bottles of Cardui, my nerves improved. I did not have the bad headaches, and I gained in strength and weight. My work was no effort, and I felt fine. “I have used Cardui when I needed a tonic for forty years or more, and it has always helped me.” This well-known medicine is a mild, harmless extract of valuable medicinal herbs. It has been in use so long, its merit has been proved by the experience of several generations of women.
ovw tortus Cardoseptic, for hygieuie reasons, should be used by women as a mild, harmless detergent; 10 eta
