Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
CRYSTAL WILL BE MAIN 1930 FEATURE OF DINNER TABLES
Black and White Win High Favor BY JULIA BLANSHARD, SEA Service Writer. NEW YORK. Jan. 3.--The new year promises to be a bright one. Judging by the new crystal dishes that are on the market, waiting to sparkle on the smart hostesses’ table. The chic novelty in table decorations this new year is the blackwhite color scheme—white roses in the center, white damask or lace dinner sets, and sparkling crystal dishes, in the new ebony glassware. What could be smarter, for instance, than cream of mushroom soup served in black glass bowls? Prom soup to nuts there are ebony glass dishes now, and those women who like novelty and freshness for their hospitality will make use of them. Centerpieces Are Varied If one does not wish to use flowers for a centerpiece, there are crystal fountains, sparkling clusters of tiny flowers and a hundred newly created designs of crystal centerpieces that harmonize with the spirit of the modern home. Some of the new glassware compromises, with black bases in the form of conventional flower designs from w'hich etched white crystal, thin as air iteself, rises in slender, delicate loveliness, to fashion goblets, bowls, plates and cups and saucers. There is colored crystal for those who prefer it. Ruby red crystal is among the most popular. It* may be plain or most decorative, with carved crystal bases in the form of fish, modernistic setback designs, or dozens of othet patterns. Originality Is Unlimited Azure, green, amber and topaz breakfast and luncheon sets are having a vogue. With the colored damask, crash linens, lace sets from Italy and Spain, printed sets from Bohemia or gay hand-woven sets from Russia, there is no limit to the originality and interest which may characterize the home table. Simple pressed colored glass sets, plain as to form and without any decorations, are best for breakfast. Given sparkling silver along with them, the table ensemble is most pleasing. Fruits make a better breakfast piece than flowers. But when luncheon comes, some of the fine, sparkling bubble glass may be used, with the salads and soups and appetizing dessert twice as appealing served in it. A yellow’ vegetable plate, for instance. is stunning on green glass. Cos is one that contains such colorful things as grilled tomatoes. Choice Is Wide Besides the formal and informal regular table dishes in the new glass, there are crystal sets for porch entertaining, for beverages, frozen desserts, cakes, sandwiches, salads and other tempting refreshments that the obliging hostess may plan. If one does not feel equal to supplying the home with an entire table service of crystal, the addition of a single course of crystal is a worth-while departure. An after dinner coffee set is perhaps the best single choice. Served near the open fire in the living room, the crystal catches the gleam of the flames and enlivens the occasion. Ebony Is Good No matter what one's dinner table color scheme may have been, the ebony glass after-dinner coffee service is in place. These come in the new egg-shell shapes or in low, squat ones. With a slender shaped silver service the former is appropriate, while the latter may be better if one's coffee urn, sugar and creamer are of the underslung type. If one does not prefer black crystal for coffee, the etched clear ones are perhaps the second most elegant choice one can make. ■Whatever one's personal taste in color, however, it can be suited perfectly and satisfactorily in some of the new crystal.
OFFICERS INSTALLED BY G. A, R. LADIES
T. W. Bennett circle. No. 123, Ladies of the G. A. R.. installed new officers Thursday afternoon at Ft. Friendly. 512 North Illinois street. Follow.ng are the officers: President, Mrs. Bessie Hart; senior vice-president, Mrs. Clementine Van Asdal: junior vice-president, Mrs. Adeline Maze; secretary, Mrs. Anna Davis; treasurer, Mrs. Bessie Cooley; chaplain, Mrs. Sarah Mason; patriotic instructor. Mrs. Florence Bell Roberts; conductor, Mrs. Anna Hewson; assistant conductor, Mrs. Ida Wilson; guard, Mrs. Kate Porter; assistant guard, Mrs. Cora V. Clapp; musician, Mrs. Ethel WiUis. Mrs. Roberts, assisted bv Mrs. Willis, was in charge of installation.
CARD PARTIES
Division No. 10, L. A. A O. H. will give a card party tonight at 8:30 in St. Joseph's hall, 615 East North street. La Velle Gossett Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a benefit card and bunco partv tonight at the hall, Walnut and King streets. Mrs. Elliott Entertains Members of the Fayette Club met at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Carl D Elliott. 4710 Carrollton avenue. Sorority Meeting Slated Sigma Tau Delta sorer tv will nold *ts regular meeting Friday night at the home of Miss G adys Orittcn, 57 North Tremont street.
STATE BRIDE
■ ■ '' ' ''• f, • • .. • .
Mrs. Earl Keisker Marriage of Miss Esther Frances Faulknor, Michigan City, to Earl Keisker, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Keisker, Richmond, took place Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Keisker will be at home in Richmond.
Sorority to Celebrate Natal Day Fifty-second anniversary of the founding of Mu chapter, Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, on the Butler campus, will be celebrated Tuesday. The affair will be a formal dinner at 6:15 at the Woman’s Department Club, 1702 North Meridian street. All local alumnae of Mu chapter, together with the active chapter and pledges, are invited. Reservations may be made with Miss Florence Lupton, chairman in charge; Miss Irma Ulrich, or Mrs. Everett M. Schofield. Guests of honor, who will be seated at the speakers’ table, will include Mrs. Peter M. Dill, charter member of Mu chapter; Mrs. Schofield. president of the Mu chapter foundation; Miss Margaret Woessner. president of Mu Alumnae Club; Miss Josephine O'Neill, president of the active chapter; Miss Jessie Strickland, chairman of pledges; Mrs. Austin V. Clifford, vice-presi-dent of the house association, and alumnae adviser of the chapter; Miss Edith Huggins, secretary of Mu chapter foundation; Miss Evelyn Poston, chapter house president; Miss Margaret Barker, treasurer of the active chapter, and Miss Adelaide Gould, a representative of the recent initiates of the chapter. Miss Woessner will act as toastmistress. Responses w’ill be given by Mrs. Dill, who will be the only charter member present, and Miss Gould, representing the youngest, class of Kappas present. The dinner tables will be decorated with smilax and lighted with tall tapers. Those assisting Miss Lupton are Mrs. Emil Linegar. Miss Kathryn Bowlby, Miss Uene Harryman, Miss Dorothy Rinehart, Miss Betty DeHass. Miss Dorothy Jane Black. Miss Mary Virginia Black and Miss Margaret Bruner.
COUPLE WEDDED AT IRVINGTON CHURCH
Marriage of Miss Anna Wilron, daughter of Mrs. R. L. Burtt, 78 Brookville road, to Roland Reed, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Reed, took place at noon Wednesday at the Irvington Methodist church. The Rev. Joseph B. Rosemurgy read the service. Miss Helen Stines, Sullivan, was maid of honor and Herbert Schriber was best man. A reception at the bride's home followed. The couple has gone on an eastern trip. Mrs. Reed was graduated from Hardin col’e e. Mexico, Mo.
ST.ROCM’S GROUP WILL GIVE PARTY
Altar Society of St. Rocb's "Lurch will held its regular tournament card party at the hall, 3603 South Meridian street, Sunday afternoon and night. Mrs. John Niehaus, hostess, is being assisted by the following committee: Mrs. Joseph Holzer. Mrs. Joseph Pearson, Mrs. George Adrian, Mrs. Frank Reldel. Mrs. Ray Reeser, Mrs. Luther Worthington and Mrs. Harry Evans Special luncheon will be served from 5 to 7 o'clock. Free transporation will be provided to and from the South Meridian car.
PERSONALS
Mrs. J. M. Dalrymple, Marott hotel, is in Long Beach, Cal., where she spent the holiday season. Mrs. Dessie M. Gilchrist, Marott hotel, has been the guest of her daughter. Mrs. W. H. Alfring, Scarsdale. N. Y., during the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Archie N. Bobbitt, 615 East Forty-ninth street, have gone to Chicago, where they will spend the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bulliet. Sketch ers to Meet Members of the Sketching Club jrill meet at 2:30 Saturday aftemcon at the home of Mrs. Woodburn Masson. 930 East Fi.ty-seventh street. Miss Nanie Mofflt will talk on “Spanish Symbols.” Sahara Buds to Meet Mi se Eleanor Saunders, 317 North State streets, will be hostess for a meeting of the Sahara Buds at 8 i clock Saturday night. Bridge will be played.
Girl Usually Finds Excuse for Smashup BY MARTHA LEE Any time a girl gets the go-by from her boy friend she will confide, very confidentially to all her friends, one at a time, of course, that she has made a faux pas some time during the time of the courtship which resulted in the break. Maybe she has, and then again, may be he just decided he didn’t like her quite as well as he at first supposed. Granting that the case is true, or even granting that the girl has left the boy standing, holding the well known gunny sack, it is a rare occasion when the boy indulges in post-mortems over his affairs of the heart that are said and done. It is human nature, if you love someone dearly, that when they treat you badly you will rake and scrape around for some plausible excuse. That is so you can take them back and still keep your selfrespect. That is so that old demon, pride, may be properly appeased. Talk to any woman who has gotten a divorce from her husband, and invariably she will start dismembering the past to find excuses for the smash-up. And nine times out of ten the break will be attributed by her to the following of the advice of some friend or relative who had thought to help her out. Bad Sportsmanship That’s bad sportsmanship on the part of women. If you can’t hold your man, all the advice and tricks and subterfuge in the bag won’t help any. You’ve got to make yourself necessary to a man’s existence. Then if things go wrong, you may be assured that, even if you sit by and fold your hands quietly in your lap, he will come to realize how necessary you are. A young girl, who was getting on fine with her young man until she read one of my articles and began putting the philosophy to a test, has written to tell me I am responsible for her broken heart. Dear Miss Lee—l am 20 years old. but I have had plenty of "puppy love" affairs. A little over a year ago I met a charming. handsome and decent young man. I fell in iove with him and I am sure he loved me. Followed Advice This summer I saw an article in your column that said to make your sweetheart jealous. I decided that was the thing to do. X started going out with other boys. I became quite popular. Finally I decided I didn’t love him as much as I had thought. He wrote me a letter, telling me how badly he felt about it all and I realized I did love him after all. but I was too late. I have not seen him since. I got a Christmas card from him. but there was no address on it that would tell me where to find him. Can you help me? HEART BROKEN. If you were getting along so well with your boy friend, why in the world did you do such a sappy thing? Surely you are intelligent enough to realize when a thing applies to your own particular case, and when it doesn’t. If you are not, it is no wonder the boy gave you up for a bad job. That is about as sensible as taking a cure for some malady you do not have. Something is bound to result. If the boy loves you and hears about how you have reformed, and how you do nothing but sit around mourning for him I’m quite sure he will come riding back on a milk-white steed.
REPORT OF PARTY IS DECLARED ERROR
First two editions of The Indianapolis Times Thursday carried an item concerning a dinner-dance, to be given tonight by Miss Mary Alice Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Moore. Miss Moore is not entertaining tonight. The information, which was taken as true, was telephoned in by some person who gave the report erroneously.
MISS BRUNER BRIDE IN NEW YEAR RITE
Marriage of Miss Margaret Bruner, daughter of Professor and Mrs. Henry Lane Bruner, 324 South Ritter street, to Hcrshel Wendell Hudson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hudson. St. Joseph, 111., took place New Year's eve at the bride'.home. Dr. H. O. Pritchard read the service. Mr. and Mrs. Hudson will be at home in Denver, where Mr. Hudson is a member of the faculty at Denver university. The bride was graduated from Butler university where she was a Kappa Kappa Gamma.
MISS ATHA IS BRIDE OF ALVIN CLIFTON
Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Drusa Atha, formerly of Portland, to Alvin G. Clifton. son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Clifton. 3205 East New York street. The wedding took place at 8 Monday night at the First Reformed church. The Rev. G. J. Rusom read the service. The couple was attended by Mr. and Mrs. Amert Clifton, who were best man and matron of honor, and Miss Goldie Miller, who was bridesmaid. After a wedding trip through the northern part of the state, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton will be at home at 1012 North Beville avenue. Give Fonnal Ball Thiid formal seasonal ball being given by the Marott hotel for residents and their guests, will be held at 9 o’clock Thursday, Jan. 16, in the marble ballroom. Club Has Dinner Party . Members of the Washington Boulevard Clu\> entertained with a dinner Thursday in the Crystal dining room of the Marott hotel Mrs. J. W. Warren was in charge of the affair. A theater party followed the dinner.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BRIDGE PARTY GIVEN FOR HONOR GUESTS
Miss Wilma Mae Wolf, Gary, and Miss Eugenia Hsia, Nanchang, China, were guests of honor at a bridge party given Thursday night by Miss Dorothy Rubn, 2436 College avenue. Mrs. G. M. Rubin assisted her daughter. Other guests were Mrs. Alice Coroin Sies, Miss Hope Bedford, Miss Grace Graves, Miss Elizabeth Means, Bloomington; Miss Helen Hyde. Miss Dorothy Schlesinger, Miss Delma Vestal, Miss Miriam Auermach, Miss Vada McCarter, Miss Frances Herrick, Miss Dorothy Rosebrock, Miss Rosella Hall, Miss Frieda Brill and Miss Bernadine Clashman.
JEWISH WOMEN TO MEET AT CENTER
January meeting of the Indianapolis section of the National Council of Jewish Women will take place Monday at 2:15 at the Kirshbaum Community center, 2314 North Meridian street. Mrs. Felix Levy, Chicago, will talk on “Women of Russia.” Miss Eugenia Madigson will give a group of Russian songs in costume, accompanied by Mrs. Simon Kiser. Mrs. Louis Wolf, president, will preside at the social hour following the meeting. Mrs. J. B. Solomon, chairman of the hospitality committee, will be assisted by other members. Tea will be served.
Royal Bride Will Wear White to Emphasize Blondeness
BY PRINCESS ALI FAZIL, PARIS, Jan. 3.— Consciously or unconsciously, the little blonde Princess Marie Jose of Belgium, who will go into the history of fashion as "the best dressed royal bride of a century,” has determined one of the most important arguments nowbefore the women of the world. For upon the gorgeous gowns that form her trousseau undoubtedly will be built the styles of 1930 and perhaps of years to come. It is accordingly interesting to note, first that they give royal assent to the long skirt and high, tight waist, over which there has raged such a controversy. And they have no short sleeves, which, although it may be an act of obedience to court etiquet, will put the stamp of authority on the crusade against “immodesty.” Marie Jose will be a “white bride.” That is because the Italian, French and Belgian masters of worldfamous ateliers, who collaborated on her trousseau, wanted to emphasize her decided blondeness. So she will travel in white, will be married in white, and will honeymoon in white. The gown in which she leaves for Rome is of white moire and mink fur. Over it will be a coat of Canadian mink, but before she arrives at Rome Sunday, this will be changed for a three-quarter white moire coat, trimmed with white fox. The wedding dress will be of white panne velvet trimmed with ermine and slightly decollete. With it goes’ a nuptial coat, trimmed with ermine, gift of Crown Prince Humbert, again emphasizing the white note. The coat is embroidered with the arms of the house of Savoy. On her bridal night Marie Jose
Paris Can Put Over Larger Skirts Only if U. S. Approves
F.’t Timm Kvccial NEW YORK. Jan. 3.—Not what French designers say about the long skirts, but what American women decide to do about it will determine the success or failure of the present attempt to reintroduce floor-sweeping gowns to feminity. The phrase longer is no “Paris die-
JOHN KLEE HONORED AT SURPRISE PARTY
John Klee was the guest of honor at a surprise dinner party given at 6 p. m. Wednesday at his Lome. 6031 Central avenue. Covers were laid for Mr. Klee, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Federle, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Raths, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Klimper, Mr. and Mrs. John Lauck, Mr. and Mrs. John Weigand. Mrs. William Herman, Mrs. Nell Vollmer, Mrs. Francis Wagner, Mrs. Jacob Krieth and Raymond Coehm.
ENTERTAIN ORPHANS AT THEATER PARTY
Children in city orphans’ home and the Indianapolis Day Nursery were entertained with a theater party at 10 this morning by A. C. Zaring, owner of the Zaring theater. This Is an annual affair. Mrs. John Compton was general chairman. Hostesses were Mrs. David Ross, Mrs. Thomas Demmerley, Mrs. J. H. Orndorff, Mrs. John Cochran, Mrs. Harry French. Mrs. Fred H. Knodel, Mrs. H. C. Bertrand and Mrs. W. W. Ward, all members of the Indianapolis branch, Indorsers of Photoplays. Transportation was furnished by the Indianapolis Street Railway Company; members of Mu Phi Epsilon, national musical sorority; the Harmonie Club and other organizations. Assembly Women to Meet The State Assc-mbly Women will hold a luncheon at the Marott hotel Wednesday. More than fifty guests will attend. A program in the formal parlor will fellow. Auxiliary Has Luncheon A luncheon for members of the Southern Club Auxiliary, was given today at the home of Mrs. Eugene S. Fisher. 3SC4 Broadway. The hostess was ars "ted by Mrs. F-rbert Sheets and Mrs. William ft. Scaff.
Council to Hear Talk on Aviation First meeting of the new year of the Indianapolis Council of Women will be held Tuesday at Central Avenue Methodist Episcopal church, Twelfth street and Central avenue. Mrs. M. C. Morris, chairman of section No. 3, is in charge of the program. Captain H. Wier Cook, manager of the Curtis flying field, will talk on "Aviation Developments.” Mrs. John H. Compton, chairman of musical directors, is arranging a special musical program. Reservations must be made with club presidents, who will report to Mrs. O. M. Sears by Monday morning. Mrs. A. B. Glick, president, will preside during the business hour and at the luncheon. Presidents of affiliated organizations have been asked to report memberships. Clubs in section No. 3 are the Indianapolis Auxiliary to the National Federation of Postoffice Clerks, Indian? polis Current Events, Indianapolis Federation of Parent-Teachers, Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, Indianapolis Workers for the Blind, Indorsers of Photoplays, Inter Alia Club, Inter Nos Club, Irvington Coterie. Irvington Fortnightly Club, Irvington Quest Club and the Late Book Club.
will be gowned in white brussels linen and lace. To Paris most of the who will help to make Marie Jose’s wedding a glittering pageant have turned for their wedding gowns. And here, releasing 'a very tenderly cherished secret of some of the Paris couturiers, are brief descriptions of some of them. Former Queen Amelie of Portugal —A Worth court gown in gray and gold lame, with a short train. Coat trimmed with fur. Fur lace mantilla held in place by a diadem of emeralds and diamonds. For evening wear, a purple velvet gown with an all-diamond diadem. Duchesse De Vendome —Gold and “dead leaf” lame, with fur-trimmed train. Signorina Florio. daughter of M. et Mme. Franca Florio of Palermo— Pale pink satin. For evening, frock of georgette and tulle in two shades of green. La Marquise de Brichanteau: White satin gown. Short cape and spider bow embroidered in diamonds. Train of blue velvet lined with gold, colors of the house of Savoy, La Princesse Christopher (formerly the Princess Francoise de France): Gold and brown lame v.-ith train for evening wear. Wedding dress of yellow velvet and coat to match. La Comtesse Chartier de Sedouy: Gold lame gown, train lined with light velvet for evening. A wedding gown of red velvet with red velvet train. The usual mantilla, a lace covering the head and falling over the shoulders, will be worn by all the ladies attending the royal wedding.
tates,” but “Paris offers.” If American women turn thumbs down on longer skirts, Paris will modify her offerings. This is the conclusion to be drawn from a study of style sources and tendencies by Franklin S. Clark, appearing in the current issue of the Review of Reviews. "As things stand, America is most important from the standpoint of accepting or rejecting new styles,” Mr. Clark finds. "Europe has most to do with creating styles in clothing, as in other articles, partly because Europe is more advanced in the art of design. "And just as quantity production and mass distribution make fashion commercially important in America, helping to sell an article by hundreds of thousands, where in Europe it is. sold by hundreds, so the less advanced stage of production in Europe encourages experimenting with a large number of designs. "Paris still exerts a strong influence on styles. But this influence is conditioned upon its exceptional understanding of fashion, or feeling for it. Most of the new fashions in women’s wear continue to come from Paris, but it no longer has a monoply upon them. "As this is written, Paris has decreed longer skirts, ‘femininity’ and corsets. But Paris made that identical decree last year, and the year before, and the year before. This year women were ready to accept. But for how long they will accept it even now—or how extensively—are questions that remain to be answered.” Hold Pledge Service Rho Delta sorority will hold pledge services for Miss June Stower, Miss Mary Roach, Miss Mary Esther Greenan, Miss Eledia Mitchell and Miss Juanita Stallings at a meeting at 8 o’clock tonight at the home of Miss Ruth Griffith, 1303 North LaSalle street.
KO-WEBA (means the SEST^ COFFEE kothe wells a BALER CO. INDIANAPOLIS
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An amethyst panne velvet evening ensemble trimmed icith ermine dyed a rich purple. Dah-ray Design.)
fjust as w T e ab lble of pann with amethys I just couldn ?sign, honestl French dress p for me righ Princess line and the shor uve velvet anc collar and eul ermine, whicl --rabbit agair : the purple! ;ning w’raps : ooted fashio answer is—ex short in effect, or ver ;woop of tb : just isn’t an evening wrap another stor g a circula pening on tb a harmonizin iderskirt, als PARIS, Jan. 3. circular. This for afternoon,
JT seems to be the unanimous opinion of the really important couturiers that skirts neither very long nor very short should be, will be, and ARE the choice of every elegant woman. Elegant women have never really liked the very short skirts. They just couldn’t be nice, unless one could afford to wear long silk tights or something like that—and then I doubt if they could be nice. But neither can an elegant woman sponsor very long skirts, which of necessity trail the ground and can not be worn for an hour without becoming filthy. There are times and places for long skirts, and no others—and the time is not during the day and the place is not on the street. nan ONE should realize that all discussions for and against the long skirts pertain only to daytime wear. There is no discussion about long skirts for evening. There isn’t a woman in the world who does not like to be a grande dame, nor a woman in the world who would not feel demode in a short skirt on the dance floor. Which leads us to something rather important about evening coats —something you must hear about soon. n n a The Couturiers HEIM. The most elegant furrier of Parish-pronounced exactly like it is in English except that the
wi w.i Smart Crepes and High Colored Georgettes Just Here! New Dresses wmh ‘Frock Smartness, Low Priced’ NEW fashion ideas, NEW colors, NEW trims! And not just a few, but 300 advance springtime frocks, fresh and alluring, just out of their tissue wrappings . . . Shown FIRST Saturday. Crepes, georgettes, prints; dark and high shades. 1 / / Misses’ Sizes, 14 to 20 Women s Sizes, 36 to 48
"H” is silent—“l’m,” just as w r e abbreviate “I am." n a a AN evening ensemble of panne velvet trimmed with amethyst and mauve crystal! I just couldn't resist making this design, honestly —and my cunning French dressmaker is making it up for me right this minute! It has Princess lines and hugs the hips, and the short jacquette is of the mauve velvet and, sh-h-h-h, has a huge collar and cuff of—really, my dear, ermine, which will never be bunny-rabbit again, dyed a deep shade of the purple! u a u npHE length of evening w’raps is today’s mast mooted fashion question. And the answer is—extremes. Either very short in a jaunty, just - below - the - natural-waist-line jacquette effect, or very long, following the swoop of the modish gown. There just isn’t any three-length in an evening WTap! Coats, yes—but that’s another story. nun SKIRTS are taking a circular trend, with an opening on the side, which reveals a harmonizing printed material underskirt, also circular. This for afternoon, I mean, and informal street wear. And usually it complements a straight, tight-at-the-w’aist jacquette over a blouse, which matches the underskirt —and really blouses! % nun Au Revoir! Dinner for Couple at Local Club Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Westervelt Blain will entertain with a bridal dinner at 7 o’clock tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in honor of their daughter, Miss Eleanor Blain, and her fiance, Earl Gurney Mann, Richmond. The wedding of Miss Blain and Mr. Mann will take place at 4 Saturday at Christ church. The table will be centered with a large bowl of pink roses and lighted with white bridal tapers, festooned with orange blossoms. Covers will be laid for Mr. and Mrs. Blain. Miss Blain, Mann, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Langsenkamp, Mr. and Mrs. Henry John Frenzel, Mr. and Mrs. John Lemon, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Shoemaker, Richmond; Miss Frances Reed, Miss Hope Pfafflin, Miss Katharine Brown, Stewart Mann, Richmond; Joseph j Gilbert, Kansas City, Mo.; Hiram i McKee and Wilson Mothershead.
JAN. 3, 1930
Bride-Elect Entertains With Dinner Miss Edith Ann Stafford will entertain tonight with a dinner party at the University Club in honor of Miss Sara Disney Thomas, her fiance. Thomas Reed Kackley. and members of the bridal party. The table will be arranged with a centerpiece of roses and lighted by royal blue tapers in silver candelabra, carrying out Miss Thomas' bridal colors, rose and royal blue. Miss Stafford's guests included Miss Betty Hassler, Miss Martha Taylor, Miss Mary Ellen McNamee, Miss Eunice De Puy, Miss Betty Brown, Miss Sarah Frances Kackley, Thomas Ruckelhaus, Reginald Garstang, Malcolm Jillson. Paul _ Martin, Charles Greathouse. John Kinghan an'd Thomas Madden. Mrs. Edward Anderson and Mrs. Henry’ C. Atkins Jr. entertained with a bridge tea in honor of Miss Thomas at Mrs. Anderson’s home, 1615 North Talbot street, this afternoon. At serving time, the tables wera lighted with rose tapers. The hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. Albert E. Goepper and Mrs. Edna Kuhn Martin. Guests with Miss Thomas wera Mrs. Donald Ream, Mrs. Rudolph Stempfel, Mrs. Ewing Sinclair, Mrs. Paul Hoffman, Miss Hassler, Miss Brown, Miss McNamee. Miss Stafford, Miss Taylor, Miss Kackley, Miss Du Puy, Miss Frances Hamilton, Miss Sara Tice Adams, Miss Caroline Sweeney and Miss Ann j Tyndall. . Club Croup Has Party of Long Ago A corned beef-and-cabbage dinj ner, followed by an old-fashioned j party, was held last night by j members of the Business and Proj fessional Women’s Clubs at the de- ! partment club house. During the forum hour Miss Hortense Reid of the Mantell-Hamper Shakesperean Company, gave some back-stage stories of the theater in her talk, ‘‘Family Secrets.” Miss Ada O. Frost, club president, wore a costume that Miss Elizabeth Hopkins wore ihore than a hundred years ago. Miss Hopkins was the first woman dean of Earlham college, Richmond. Members of the club, appearing in costumes representing styles from 1860 to 1900. presentee l a skit "A Meeting of the Ladies’ Aid.” Miss Thelma Hawthorne, contralto, 1 sang a group of old-fashioned songs. She was accompanied by Miss Mary Gottman. | After the program Mrs. George Ecker led the club in old-fashioned games and a spelling match. Pledges to Entertain Beta Tau sorority will be enterj tained with a bunco party at tie | home of Miss Alice Nickels, 29 North Riley street, Friday night. The party is being given by pledges to the sorority. Arrange Benefit Party Magnolia circle. No. 4, will entertain with a benefit card party at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon at Red- ; men’s hall, Morris and Lee streets.
Waverite Permanent $2.50 Complete, Including Finger Wave Nestle Circuline, $5.00 Robertson Beauty Shoppe Formerly of ShelbyviJle 2157 N. Illinois Bt. TAlliot 500.1
