Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 239, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 February 1930 — Page 16
PAGE 16
Artists to Show Work at Exhibit William Forsyth, Irvington artist, will speak Sunday afternoon at 3 at the second annual exhibition of Irvington artists. The exhibit, sponsored by the Irvington Union of Clubs, will be opened Saturday afternoon at 2 in Carr's hall, 5436 East Washington street. Canvasses may be seen daily from 2 to 9 p. m„ through Sunday. Feb. 23. More than a hundred will be exhibited. Among artists who are hanging paintings are S. Clifton Wheeler, Mrs. Hilah Drake Wheeler, Frederick Polley, Dorothy Morlan. Tom Hibben, Helene Hibben, William Forsyth, Constance Forsyth, Robert C. Craig and Simon P. Baus. Hostesses for Saturday, the opening day will be the committee on arrangements, composed of Mrs. Clarence Forsyth and Miss Katherine Layman, co-chairman; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Ropkey, Dr. and Mrs. Silas Carr, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Butler and Miss Lucille Morehouse. Mrs. Joseph Ostrander, chairman of the union, has named the following hostesses for Sunday; Irvington Dramatic Club, Mrs. Irwin Berterman, Mrs. George Newton, Mrs. Charles Brosman. Mrs. F. R. Brown. Mrs. Clifton Wheeler. Mrs. William Forsyth and Mrs. A. B. Shultz: Home Study Club, Mrs. Daniel S. Adams, Mrs. F. T. Brown, Mrs. Horace W. Townsend, Mrs. Milton Mangus, Mrs. Merritt Harrison, Mrs. Tom S. Elrod, Mrs. George C. Bosley; Woman's Club, Mrs. R. F. Davidson, Mrs. Walter King, Mrs. George Bucks, Mrs. Charles Harrison, Mrs. Elijah Jordan, Mrs. Wlter Kelley and Mrs. Louis Wood.
Public Health Nursing Group Committee Members Named
Appointment of committees for the year were made Thursday at the meeting of directors of the Public Health Nursing Association, held in the Fletcher Savings and Trust building. Mrs. William H. Insley was named chairman of the bureau of nursing service. Mrs. Robert Bryce will serve as vice-chairman. In this service are Mrs. Henry B. Hey wood, chairman of nurses, assisted by Mrs. Bryce; Mrs. James A. Bawden, Mrs Severin Buschmahn, Mrs. J. H. P Oauss. Mrs. W D. Gatch. Mrs. W F. Milholland, Mrs George A. Van Dyke, Mrs. B. J. Terrell and Mrs. W. W. Thornton. Mrs. Bryce Is to be chairman of the nurses’ supplies, assisted by Mrs. Philander Lewis, and Mrs. C. S. Mcßride, who will be in charge of purchasing. Mrs. Terrell, chairman of the supply room, will be assisted by Mrs. A M. Alexander and the office secretary. Mrs. Christopher B. Coleman will be chairman of auxiliaries, assisted by Mrs. Terrell and Mrs. Milholland. Mrs. Robert Dorsey and Mrs. A. C. Cavins are in charge of the promotion bureau. Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz is chairman of co-operation, assisted by Mrs. Coleman, Mrs. Cavins and Mrs. C. F. Neu. Mrs. James A. Bawden is head of the publicity department, assisted by Mrs. Niles Chapman, Mrs. Thornton Insley, Mrs. Dorsey, Mrs. F. R. Kautz. Mrs. Charles F. Meyer Jr., and Miss Helen Sheerin. Miss Sheerin also is head of the emergency committee, assisted by Mrs. Louis Haerle, Mrs. Louis Burckhardt, Mrs. A. C. Rasmussen, Miss Ruth Shee-
VISiTORS ARE-GUESTS AT DINNER PARTY
Miss Marie Schmecker, Miss Leona Eggers, and Carroll Dougherty, Dayton, 0., were honor guests at a St. Valentine’s day dinner party gi\en Thursday night at the Seville tavern by R. C. Hicks. The table was decorated with a bowl of American Beauty roses and lighted with crimson tapers. A program of old-time airs and ballads was a feature of the evening. Guests were Mrs. Celia Genaro, Miss Virgina Lake, Miss Dorothy O’Hara, Miss Enth Powell, Peter Adams, George Johnston. Herbert Lester and Francis McGlinehy.
Only a doctor knows what a laxative 1 i should be
YOU don’t want to use a laxative every day. Nor once a week. This should not be necesaary. And it never would be required if all of us would learn the danger that lies in a careless ■election of laxatives. By taking the first thing that comes to mind when bad breath, headaches, dizziness, nausea, biliousness, gas on stomach and bowels, poor appetite, or lack of energy warns us that our bowels are sluggish, v 7 o risk forming the laxative habit. Kely on a doctor’s judgment in choosing your laxative. Here’s
ape made from the prescription a£ * specialist in bowel and ctomach trouble. Its originator tried it in m*ny thousands of eases. He it safe for women, children and old.folks; thoroughly efi-stive for the
Miss Dorothy Hook Becomes Bride of Russell E. Clift
A lovely wedding took place today when Miss Dorothy Margaret Hook, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hook, Walnut Hills. Springmill road, became the bride of Russell Edwin Clift, yon of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Clift, 3127 West Washington street. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Elmer Ritter, pastor of
HONOR GUEST
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—Photo by National. Miss Mary Ross
Bethel No. 1, Job’s Daughters, will entertain with a Valentine dance tonight at the Denison in honor of Miss Mary Ross, honored queen, and Miss Ruth Hoskinson, past honored queen.
rin, Miss Deborah Moore and the Junior League. Mrs. Kautz was reappointed membership chairman, assisted by Mrs W. A. Eshbach, Mrs. Ronald A Green, Mrs. Milholland, Mrs. E Jordan, Mrs. Edwin McNally, Misses Ruth and Helen Shcerin. Mrs. Kautz also will be in charge of the business bureau. Mrs. Eshbach is vicechairman of administration. They are to be assisted by Mrs. Green. Mrs. Hitz. Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Charles J. Lynn and Mrs. William H. Insley. Mrs. Burckhardt will be chairman of the special gift committee assisted by Mrs. Mortimer Furscott. Mrs. Haerle, Mrs. Gatch, Miss Julia Walk and Dr. Frank S. C. Wicks.
University Women Maintaining Scholarships for Students
Branch organizations of the Indiana federation of the American Association of University Women in ten cities of Indiana, are maintaining scholarship for worthy high school girls, according to reports received by Mrs. John T. Wheeler of Indianapolis, president of the organization. Plans for co-operating with the national organization in raising the $30,000 quota assigned to the state of Indiana on the million dollar fellowship fund, also have been : 'ade by practically every one of, th. twenty-five branch organizations in the state, according to Mrs. Wheeler In seven cities, the branch organizations have concerned themselves exclusively with efforts to raise their proportionate amount of the state quota and have, in some of the cities, discontinued the local scholarships until the Indiana quota of the million dollar fellowship fund is raised. Scholarships ranging from SSO to S9OO are being maintained in the various organizations and it has become a custom to award these scholarships at seme annual event in honor of the graduating classes of the high schools, according to reports received from the following presidents; Mrs. Esther Marvin Guthrie. Anderson; Mrs. Charles T. Sembower, Bloomington; Mary Fell Murphy, Connersville; Mrs. Elsa P. Klein, Franklin; Mrs. Helen Hicks Link. La Porte; Florence Jay, Marion: Mrs. Louise Reed Miller, Michigan City; Mrs. Flora William Thompson, Muncie; Mrs. Rose M.
most robust man. There were so many calls for this prescription and its fame spread so rapidly that druggists began to fill it in quantities; kept it ready for calls. Now Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, as it is called, is prepared from the freshest herbs and other pure ingredients under ideal conditions. You can get the generous bottles of it from drug stores in any part of the world. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a real corrective of constipation. Millions have proved this. That’s why it is today the world’s most popular laxative!
Dr. W. B. Caldwell’s SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's Family Laxative
SS. Peter and Paul cathedral, at high noon, in the conservatory of the home of the bride's parents. The service was read before banked ferns and flowers. Preceding the ceremony, Morrison Davis, accompanied by Kelton Whitetein, sang a group of bridal airs, Including “Until,” “O Promise Me,” and “Bridal Chorus” from Lohengrin. Miss Catherine Connor, harpist, played “Sweat Mystery of Life,” and during the ceremony, “To a Wild Rose.” Miss Dorothy Fife, the bride’s only attendant, wore s- gown of pale blue chiffon, made with a fitted bodice and long full skirt. The bodice had a cape collar, with lace inserts. She wore a large horsehair braid hat, and slippers of the same shade of blue. Her arm bouquet was of pink roses and lilies of the valley. Bobby Lou Johnson, flower girl, wore a ruffled frock of rose taffeta, and earned a basket of rose petals. August Hook, brother of the bride, was best man. Ushers were Ralph Hook, another brother, and Malcolm Carlisle. The bride, who was given In marriage by her father, wore white satin, made princess style, with long tight sleeves and rose point lace collar. The skirt was fashioned with four points, the sidb pieces longer than the front panel, and the one in back sweeping into a train. A large bow of satin was placed in back, at the waistline. Her veil was of white tulle, made cap style, caught at the sides and in the back with orange blossoms. The bottom of the. train also was caught with orange blossoms. She carried a real lace handkerchief belonging to Mrs. Reilly C. Adams, and carried at her wedding and by her mother, as well as several recent brides. Her shower bouquet was of Easter lilies, white roses, and friesias. A reception followed the ceremony. The bride’s table was centered with a wedding cake in a garland of white roses and smilax, and lighted by white tapers. Mrs. Hook received in black lace, with salmon, and Mrs. Clift, In black lace. Both wore corsages of butterfly roses and purple sweet peas. The couple have gone on a trip to Florida, Mrs. Clift travelling in a hunter’s green ensemble, with green hat, slippers, purse and gloves, and a mink coat. They will be at home after April 1, at 6221 College avenue. Mrs. Clift is a graduate of St. Mary’s of the Woods college, and Mr. Clift attended Swarthmore college and Indiana university. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Among the out-of-town guests at the wedding were Miss Dorothy Mohlman, Lafayette; Miss Estelle Hawkins, Shoals; Frank Gallagher, Dayton, and John Kehoe, Terre Haute.
Cox, Terre Haute; Mrs. Mildred R. Hogue, Vincennes. The presidents of those branch organizations which have centered their interest on plans for the national fellowship fund are: Mrs. John Sandeis, Evansville; Miss Virginia Harlow, Greencastle; Mrs. Catherine H. Weddell, Indianapolis; Mrs. Elmer Waters, Lafayette; Mrs. Helen Connor Browm, Richmond; Miss Marcia Elizabeth Wagoner, South Bend, and Mrs. Laura L. Andrews, Peru.
Qx W f Interprets Y
PARIS, Feb. 14. | YOU never saw anything like it! You never saw anything like it because there never was anything like it—the nearest thing to it was when we took up the idea about four years ago as a sort of personal whim. And now of an evening every lovely lady in Paris carries a handkerchief which is, well, without exaggeration, every single speck as ; large as her bodice. At that, a decorative 'kerchief in ; the hand is worth two in the pocket. Who, for instance, could fail to gasp at the ensemble showing the longest black evening dress, the loveliest black velvet wrap with a white coli iar—and the lovely lady herself 1 carrying a huge flame-colored handkerchief! Or another —a great white crepe de Chine handkerchief carried with a black evening gown—the handI kerchief showing a four-inch deep j initial in black! s a a AND now there isn't any use in asking me what I think about the very large chiffon or crepe de Chine handkerchief as a lovely lady accessory—because naturally I would like it, since it has been a whim of my own for so very long. Just try the idea out for yourself —go over yOur handkerchief wardrobe and add SIX on me —you’ll see! 808 * T one of those new art exposizY. tions—l just can’t tell you vhich one, because we’ve all been mending so many lately—l saw the lost thrilling sofa-pillows—well hey were made of a paper-woven imposition, which almost defies 'escription, yet locks like the most uxurious and beautiful lame (lah;nay) you ever saw. Upon not very discreet inquiry about what this particular material might be called, after terrifying experiences had with rayon and such mysterious names, we were duly enlightened to discover that the material is called DAF. If we ever And out why, we’ll tell! a a a The hardest part of It is thinking up the idea—the rest as easy! And we’ve planned some of the SMARTEST design and color touches for your spring jackets
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Blindness of Censors Is Scored BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON One can but stand aghast at the blindness of our literary reformers. Philadelphia sleuths, they say, now are off again, like hounds on a fresh scent, trailing down more and more obscenity. The effete east it seems is much more zealous in such work than the Bible belt. Rumors now are that a vast conflagration Is being planned, something In the Savonarola style, when offending volumes will be cast into the flames and the morals of the morons again will be safe. The district attorney of that pious region is quoted as saying that he had not been able to finish all the books under suspicion as a page or two was enough for him. Page or Two Enough And, if the literary vultures would let things alone, a page or two would be enough for anybody. Nothing is more tiresome than smuttiness. The average person soon grows weary of hearing a spade called by its right name. Obscene books are all alike, so far as the dirt Is concerned. And filth is the same whether it be shallow or deep. There are only certain things to be said about sex and a repetition of them is distinctly tiresome. Even the constant showing of sizzling Icve scenes in the movies will bring yawns. The ordinary being does not relish details that arc too intimate. They embarrass him. Taste Would Disappear If we could have scattered over the country plenty of unexpurgated copies of the Arabian Nights, the taste for obscenity soon would disappear entirely. To the normal person, a description of peculiar kinds of kisses or a dissertation upon the topic chosen by The Specialist merely are passing bits of reading. He would be appalled if all his literature followed the same trends. Such things are erased as easily from a health/ mind as dirt is washed from soiled hands. For those who are so abnormal that they feed upon such stuff, there Is no literature that can pollute. Nature already has attended to that. And is a nation expected to regulate its reading for the halfwits?
SHOWER GIVEN FOR MRS, TAFFLINGER
Mrs. Charles Bosley, 35 South Brookville road, entertain ed Wednesday night with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Forest Lee Tafflinger, formerly Miss Dorothy Irene Bosley. Decorations were in keeping with the Valentine season. Mr. and Mrs. Tafflinger. married Feb. 8 at the Christian church, Greenfield, are at home with the bride’s parents. Vinner to Be Given Members of Theta Nu Chi sorority will entertain with an anniversary dinner Saturday night at’ Whispering Winds. Miss Elizabeth Anderson is in charge of the program. Miss Isabelle Early will be toastmistress. Speakers for the evening will be Miss Anita Brownlee, Miss Louise Watson, Miss Helen McCreight and Miss Edith Albertson.
and blouses in this week’s Ulus-, trated leaflet—a ! l you have to do is send a 2-cent stamp to the Dare Department of The Times for it. Border designs, triangular appl’ques, lacings here and there, bo!ero notes—weU, we won’t tell you any more about them here. If you want one "badly” enough, you’ll send your envelope. tan The Couturier LYOLENE. Today’s tongue-twist-ing pronunciation isn’t tonguetwisting at all. You say it so-o-o-o —“lee-o-lane,” with no special accent on one syllable or another, rather a musical monotone. Think you’ll have to practice it, no? ana Au Revoir!
ARRANGE DANCE
Strife*
Miss Elizabeth Chamness A So-Fra dance will be given at Municipal Gardens at 9 Saturday night. Miss Elizabeth Ch&mness is chairman in charge of arrangements.
Alumnae Will Meet Indianapolis Alumnae Club, Alpha Delta Gamma, will meet Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. G. Bailey, 1909 .North Delaware street. . • ' • . , : ' V-.- ■ - - :
INITIATE
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—Photo by Dexheimer. Mrs. Charles Snider
Members of Upsilon chapter, Sigma Phi Gamma sorority, will entertain with a formal dinner at 6:30 tonight at the Lincoln, at which time Mrs. Charles Snider, Miss Marguerite Fisher and Miss Billie Aderholtz wall be initiated. The table will be decorated with red roses and tapers. Other appointments will be in Vaentine motif. Invocation will be read by Miss Anna Shelton. Miss Mary Jane Schenck will give the address of welcome. Mrs. Snider will give the response. Miss Nellie Morgan, Miss Susie Hale and Miss Wilma Wheatcraft will give toasts. Miss Florence Gradt is chairman of the committee, which is composed of Mrs. Arnold Meier, Mrs. Roy Crowder, Miss Rebekah Hislop, Miss Marguerite Johnson and Miss Schenck. Miss Johnson will be in charge of initiation, which will follow the dinner. Others who will attend are Miss Lola Bird, Miss Mary Frances Brockway, Miss Zelma Cummings, Miss Kathryn Elzea, M ! ss Eva McLeod, Miss Eva McCauley, Miss Pauline Poe and Miss Wanetta Schlosser.
CARD PARTIES
Saturday Night Club will play cards Saturday afternoon at 2:15 at P H. C. hall, East and Michigan streets. Old-fashioned box social and card party will be given by the Golden Eagle council No. 70, D. of A., Saturday at 7:30, South Side Tabernacle, 1226 East Southern avenue. Entertains Sorority Members of Nu Sigma Phi sorority will be entertained tonight at the home of Dr. Martha Souter, 3802 North Illinois street. The program will be given by Dr. Janet Lieber and Miss Anna Goss. Give Sorority Party Mrs. Harry Storms and Mrs. Ernest De Long will be hostesses for a St. Valentine’s party to be given for members of Kappa Sigma Chi sorority tonight at the home of Mrs. Storms, 448 North Rural street
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Party Is Given by Mrs. Frasee Mrs. Lowell Frasee, 1018 West Thirty-sixth street, entertained members of the 1930 Bridge Club with a Valentine party Thursday night. Guests included Mrs. Charles Anderson, Mrs. H. A. Harlan, Mrs. A. J. Harlan, Mrs. Carl Moore, Mrs. Fred Grace, Mrs. Charles Stoltz, Mrs. William Harlan and Mrs. Wood Despain.
PERSONALS
Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. Hutchins, No. 20 Hampton court, left today tor a motor trip to Atlanta, Ga., and through the southern states. Mrs. George M. Dunn, 2152 North ! Meridian street and Miss Jess’ica j Morris, 1040 Fairfield avenue, have | gone on a trip to southern Texas. ! Before returning to Indianapolis | they will go to New Orleans for the • Mardi Gras. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McMinn and son Milbur, Peru, are the guests of Mrs. McMinn’s mother, Mrs. Estella ; Chapman, 441 North Rural street. A. B. Smillie, 4425 College avenue, is in Chicago, where he is stopping at the Edgewater Beach hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wallick, 946 North Meridian street, are at their winter home, Winter Park, Fla. Mrs. Albert E. Sterne, 1834 East Tenth street, has as her guest Mrs. C. Wallace Thomas, Washington. Meredith Nicholson, Golden Hill; Kin Hubbard, 5437 North Meridian street, and William Fortune, 1010 North Delaware street, have gone to New Orleans for a stay of several weeks. Club to Entertain Members of the Co-Wa-Ma Club will be entertained tonight with a St. Valentine’s day party at the home of Miss Dora Hastings, 1049 Villa avenue. Assisting hostesses will be Miss Dorothy Heil, Miss Pauline Goben, Miss Mabel Lansford, Miss Dorothy Robbins, Miss Ruth Patten and Miss Mary Haverstick. Sorority Gives Party Members and pledges of Sigma Phi Alpha sorority will be entertained at a Valentine party Saturday night at the home of the Misses Golda and Lena Fivel, 3257 Ruckle street. Pledges will be in charge of arrangements. Decorations and appointments will be in Chanel red and silver, the sorority colors, and will convey the Valentine idea. Sorority Will Meet Alpha chapter, Psi Kappa Rho sorority, wil entertain tonight with a party at the home of Miss Carrie Heninger. 2214 Stuart street. The hostess will be assisted by Miss Maxine Lyon and Miss Mary Ruth Greenwald. Guest day of the Afternoon Club, which was to have been observed j Thursday, Feb. 20, has been postponed indefinitely. There will be j no meeting Thursday.
SORORITY HEADS
at fan.
—A. J. Frltsch Photo. Miss Roxanna Hammond
> <s 3& s
Miss Helen Luedeman
Tau Delta Sigma sorority has elected new officers for 1930-1931 Miss Roxanna Hammond is treasurer and Miss Helen Luedeman, recording secretary.
MRS, FIRESTONE IS LUNCHEON GUEST
Mrs. George Wood, 5514 Washington boulevard, entertained today with a l o’clock luncheon, honoring Mrs. J. A. Firestone, who will leave soon to live in California. The table was centered w’ith red and white sweet peas and lighted by red tapers. Covers were laid for Mrs. Wood, Mrs. Firestone, Mrs. K. V. Ammerman, Mrs. Lulu De Vaney, Mrs. W. B. Denison, Mrs. J. A. Ford, Mrs. G. W. Hargitt, Mrs. G. J. Kitsing, Mrs C. F McDaniel, Mrs. Carmen Thomas, Mrs. C. A. Young, Mrs. J. L. Young and Mrs. Leland E. Wood.
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FEB. 14, 1930
Chapter of Sorority to Hold Dance Mrs. Lester Smith. 126 Berkley road, was hostess for the February meeting of the Indianapolis alumnae chapter. Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, at her home at 8 Thursday night. Mrs. Ray Harris and Miss Dorothy Swift were assisting hostesses. Committees reported for the annual state luncheon and dance to be held In the Travertine room of the Lincoln March 29. The following members are in charge: Luncheon—Mrs. Russell Hippensteel, Mrs. Conway Yackey, Mrs. Lester Smith, Mrs. Wayland Bailey, Mrs. Clem Price. Mrs. Richard Mills, Mrs. C. G. Pickett. Mrs. Ray Harris, Mrs. F. S. Wood, Mrs. Leo Gardner, Mrs. James Obear, Miss Mary Gertrude Manley, Miss Geraldine Kmdig, Miss Gladys Hawickhorst. Dance —Mrs. Frank Cox, Miss Frances Sliera and Miss Ruth Lincenborg. Following the business meeting. Rex Young gave a travelogue, illustrated by motion pictures. Beta Theta seniors were honor guests.
BRIDE-ELECT HONOR GUEST AT PARTY
Miss Virginia Sibcl, whose marriage to Donald Higgins will take place Feb. 17, was the honor guest at a Valentine bridge party and shower given by Miss Alice McQuillan at the home of Mrs. J. P. Aspinall. 5688 Guilford avenue. Miss McQuillan was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Ann McQuillan, and Mrs. Aspinall. Guests with the bride-elect were Mrs. Thomas H. Sibel. Mrs. J. Edwin Aspinall, Miss Frances Parker, Miss Rosalind Emrick Miss Marjorie Day, Miss Nelle Von Staden, Miss Harriett Adams. Miss Marguerite Doriot and Miss Eleanor Jones.
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