Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 February 1930 — Page 8
PAGE 8
CENTRAL W. C. T. U. WILL CELEBRATE 56TH ANNIVERSARY
Pageant to Be Feature of Meeting Central W. C. T. U. will celebrate its fifty-sixth anniversary and hold an institute, with an all-day and evening meeting, at Roberts Park Method.at Episcopal church. Delaware and Vermont streets, Wednesday. March 5. The program will open at 10:15. Mrs. W. P. Knode. director of the evangelistic department, of Central union, will lead the devotions. Miss Nellie Young, who has charge of tho children’s work in the Indiana Council of Religious Education, and who is director of the Sunday school department of Central union. will talk on "How to Teach Temperance in the Sunday schools.” A pageant, "The Spirit of 1874." will be given with Mrs. C. A. Breece as soloist and twelve members, dressed in costumes of 1874. Following this, a memorial service will be given, in charge of Mrs. Burton Shields. Luncheon will be served at noon by women of the church. A musical program will be given b.y the Lawler trio. Dr. Frank Lee Roberts, pastor of Central Avenue Methodist Episcopal church, will pronounce the invocation. Devotions for the afternoon will be led by Dr. E. W. Dunlavy, pastor of Roberts Park church. Speakers for the afternoon will be Dr. J. B. Rosemurgy, pastor of the Irvington Methodist Episcopal church, and Mrs. Stella Stimson, national and btate director of Christian citizenship of the W. C. T. U. Mrs. Stimson's subject will be “What W. C .T. U. Women Should Know About the Constitution of Indiana.” Miss Maud Delbridge, soprano, member of Central Avenue Church quartet, will sing. Fletcher Woodbury will give violin numbers. Sixty anti-cigaret posters, made by students of the John Herron Art Institute, will be on display. Copies of the Constitution of Indiana will be distributed. A silver medal contest under direction of Mrs. Fred Stucky, medal contest director of the union, will be held at night. Clara Jane Anderson, harpist, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Anderson, will give a pregram. The motion picture, “The Transgressor,” will be shown. Mrs. W. W. Reedy, president, will preside. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Edward Johnson, Washington 1785, or with Mrs. George Bowers. Girl Students at Ladywood in Musicale Students of the music department of Ladywood School for Girls entertained this afternoon with a musicals in the drawing room of the residenre hall. The program was one of modern and ultra-modern compositions, each number being preceded with a reading, descriptive of the selection to follow. Those who took part in the program were: Miss Juliet Speyers and Miss Doris Eyster. Indianapolis; Miss Margaret Murphy, Cincinnati; Miss Marian O'Connell, Chicago; Miss Virginia Pendleton, Danville, 111.; Miss Helen Bedford Jones, Los Angeles, Cal.; Miss Marion Schecter, Detroit: Miss Maxine Palma, Lafayette; Miss Agnes Holbert, Farmington, W. Va.; Miss Mary Barnard, Newcastle; Miss Jane Busche. Richmond; Miss Marie Montani, Youngstown, 0., and Miss Marjorie Meyers, Chicago. Make Plans for Dance A. D. Streight. circle. No. 16. G. A. R., will meet at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street, at 2 o'clock Thursday. Plans will be made for a dance and theater party. * Entertain Director Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Schlegel, 4615 Winthrop avenue, entertained with a dinner party Tuesday night at their home, in honor of Frank Kaiser, technical director of the German Grand Opera Company.
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HEADS DINNER GROUP
—Photo by Bretzman. Mrs. Jack A. Goodman Tenth annual dinner meeting of the Indianapolis Community Fund will be held Wednesday, March 5, in the Riley room of the Claypool. Mrs. Jack A. Goodman will serve as chairman of the reception committee. Those in charge of general arrangements are Mrs. Peter C. Reilly, Mrs. Brandt C. Downey and Mrs. William H. Coleman. One hundred and fifty reservations have been made so far. Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, Cleveland, will be the principal speaker. Eight members will be elected to the board of directors and this year’s honorary member to the Community Fund will be named.
the MODE PARIS, Feb. 26. HOW about the home dressmaker now? The mode is imposing difficulty after difficulty upon elegance, and moving itself farther and farther away from styles that are easy to copy. Even many of the Paris dressmakers are falling by the wayside—new details and methods of cutting, which call for unusual skill and experience on the part of the workgirls, are frightening the home dressmakers to death.
What, then, is she to do? Shall we all give up—call it a day and let well enough alone, and be glad that there was a day when we could make a dress in a half an hour on the sewing-machine and not look very badly in it? We shall not! It is true that skill is required in any art—whether it be the making of clothes or automobiles or cakes and pies. But this skill is something that comes with practice and brainwork, and you have a brain just as well as any little dressmaker in the establishment of a Paris couturier, and the same pair of hands. You’re just going to have to pay a little more attention, practice a little more, do a little more figuring on paper and in your mind before you impose it on your material—and I promise you that no unusual “sophistication or elegance’’ of the mode is going to frighten you to death. tt tt tt Fashion French Lache (lahsh) —loose. Lainage (lay-nahze) woolen goods. Laine (lain) —wool. Lame (lah-may)—metallic cloth. Lapin (lah-pan)—rabbit, coney. tt tt One fox fur kept carefully in a bag when not worn is worth three that are not so well brought up—in the money it saves. ’Cause it lives longer, you see! It’s just a word to the wise, so if you're wise you'll send a 2-cent stamp to the Dare department of The Times for the illustrated leaflet telling you how to make this practical bag for your fox. It hangs in the closet, you know. HAVING had such interesting success with La Secretaire Americaine and the Left-Handed Artist in changing their manner of walking from just-walking-to-get there to walking gracefully and getting there just as well, I’ve decided to tell you how to go about it in an extra leaflet, which you can have by sending an EXTRA LETTER to the Dare Department of The Times this week, marked “Beauty Leaflet.” s tt a Au Revoir! Penwomen to Meet Miss Hope Bedford, accompanied by Miss Louise Swan, will sing a group of songs, and Miss Edna Frances Phinney, harpist, will give selections at the luncheon of the Indiana branch, League of American Penwomen. at 1 o’clock Saturday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. H. A. Burnham of Massachusetts will talk on “Returned With Thanks.” Visitors may attend the meeting. Mrs. Myron R. Williams and Mrs. L. D. Owens will be in charge of reservations. Gives Luncheon Mrs. Gaylord Doyal. 1420 West Twenty-sixth street, will entertain with a covered dish luncheon for members of the Past Chiefs’ Association of Myrtle Temple, No. 7, Pythian Sisters, Thursday at her home. Mrs. Fred Willis, Mrs. Gale Stammel and Mrs. Kate Nieman will be assisting hostess. Sorority to Meet Theta chapter. Phi Beta Psi sorority, will meet Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Wallace R. Jones, 3504 East Fall Creek boulevard. Mrs. Parke Thornburg and Miss Virginia Mann will assist the bo* l **-
Dinner Bridge to Be Held at Columbia Club Members and guests of the Columbia Club will be entertained with a dinner bridge party at the club at 6:30 Tuesday night, March 4. Reservations may be made with Mrs. J. Hart Laird, club hostess, or at the office. Patrons and patronesses for the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Payne, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Bradshaw, Dr. and Mrs. D. J. McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Knippenberg, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Browne, Dr. and Mrs. Albert E. Sterne, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Faickelshaus, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. Fuerstenberg, Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hobbs, Mr. and Mrs* B. M. Forbes, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. John J. Darmody, Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Krauss, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Klein, Mr. and Mrs. Leßoy Carson, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Pray, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roemler, Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Brackett, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Petty, Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Rodabaugh, Mr. and Mrs. George Desautels and Mr, and Mrs. Wallace O. Lee.
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Barton Millikan will return to Indianapolis Friday, after a month’s sojourn in Florida and Cuba. Mrs. Millikan was Miss Llewellyn Hereth before her recent marriage. Dr. and Mrs. Dudley A. Pfaff, 1222 North Pennsylvania street, will arrive home Friday. They have been spending the last two weeks in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde J. Roach. 3840 Washington boulevard, have returned from a cruise to the West Indies. Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Ryan, 3236 North Pennsylvania street, have returned from a trip to Florida. Miss Elizabeth Bertermann, 5881 Washington boulevard, and Miss Ineva Reilly, 3134 North Meridian street, have gone to Miami.
CARD PARTIES
Division No. 7, L. A. A. O. H„ will give a card party at the hall. 116 East Maryland street, tonight. Euchre, bunco and lotto will be played. Officers of the division will be in charge. Cook-Pyle Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Frances Pyle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Pyle, 312 East Thirty-third street, to Charles W. Cook, which took place Thursday, Feb. 20. Mr. and Mrs. Cook w-ill be at home at 1402 North Alabama street after March 1. Gives Lunch eon-Bridge Mrs. Clyde D. Hunter entertained with a luncheon bridge at her home, 693 West drive, Woodruff Place, Tuesday in honor of Mrs. Harry L Bailey, who will leave soon to make her home in Evansville. Guests were: Mrs. Harley Dwire, Mrs. Harry Bates, Mrs. Fred Bain. Mrs. Clifford Syester, Mrs. Bruce Franklin and Mrs. Gertrude Marlowe.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TDIES
Dance Fete at Club to Draw Many Additional reservations have been made for the dinner dance and cabaret to be given at the Indianapolis Country Club Saturday night by members of the Christamore Aid Society. The affair is to be a Palm Beach party. At the table with Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Adams will be Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Pierce, Mr. and Mrs. Noble Dean. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Buttolph, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Witt. Mr. and Mrs. William Higgins, Mr. and Mrs. Bowman Elder, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Wolff, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weiss, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Palmer, Mrs. Matthews Fletcher, Miss Julia Brink, Mark Miller and Elmer Stout. With Miss Evelyn Barnes and her fiance, Jerry Cadick. will be Mr. and Mrs. John James Cooper, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cullom, Miss Amy Graham, Miss Marea Haueisen, William Wemmer and Louis Davis. Others at the table of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Matthews will be Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Aikman, Mr. and Mrs. Gaylord Millikan, Mr. and Mrs. John Ridgely, Miss Rosamond Van Camp and Ray Belding. At the table with Mr. and Mrs. Julian Bobbs will be Mr. and Mrs. Edward Norvell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fishback. Mr. and Mrs. Perry O’Neal, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Francis, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Browning, Mr. and Mrs. Ewing Sinclair and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bennett. With Hiram McKee will be Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Arrick 111, Mr. and Mrs. E. Gurney Mann, Richmond, and Miss Frances Reed. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Jones will have at their table Mr. and Mrs. David Jennings, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Hadley, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph W. Boozer and Mr. and Mrs. John Bookwalter. Reservations, which may be made with Mrs. Oscar Frenzel Jr., will close Thursday. Zonta Club Is Entertained at Dinner Meeting Members of the Zonta Club of Indianapolis held a dinner meeting Tuesday night at the Lumley tearoom. Mrs. Olive McLean was hostess. The tables were decorated with vari-colored balloons and lighted with tapers. Miss Olive Kiler was in charge of the program. Miss Violetta Hurst told fortunes; Mary Elizabeth, Dorothy Clair and Betty Jean Karst adt presented dance specialties; Gail Graber, accompanied by his mother, Mrs. Lucile Graber. played a program of violin selections, and Earl Smith and Mrs. Eleanor Sanders, accompanied by Miss Emma Sanders, gave cornet duets. Mrs. Bertha Moller, a member of the Zonta Club of Chicago, representing the national woman’s party, gave a brief talk. Miss Eugenia Hsia, Nanchang, China, a student at Teachers college of Indianapolis, spoke on the work of the Y. W, C, A. in China.
ANNUAL CARD PARTY GIVEN BY MOTHERS
Members of Delta Tau Delta Mothers’ Club entertained today with their annual card party at Odd Fellows’ hall, 1336 North Delaware street. Mrs. Howard White was chairman in charge of the affair. Among those who made reservations were Mrs. Smith Strickland, Mrs. W. C. Gardner, Mrs. C. W Field, Mrs. C. H. Pier, Mrs. John Conley, Mrs Joseph Shepperd, Mrs. Albert Schoen. Mrs. Thomas Ressler, Mrs. O. N. Gulling, Mrs. Dale T. Morgan, Mrs. D. H. Whitham, Mrs. T. J. Hertz, Mrs L. H. Brink, Mrs. Charles Jackman, Mrs. A. H. Helt, Mrs. M. C. Shelton. Mrs. Frank Schmedel, Mrs. A. W. Buschmann, Mrs. H. C. Wright, Mrs. Warren Gibson and Mrs. Frank T. Fairchild.
LIES IN ADDRESS TO IRVINGTON CLUBS
Eugene T. Lies, representative of the Playground and Recreation Association of American, will be the speaker at the annual open business meeting of the Irvington Union of Clubs, to be held in the social room of the Irvington Methodist Episcopal church at 2 Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Lies will talk on “High Lights of a Seven-Months Recreational Survey of Indianapolis, which he made under auspices of the Indianapolis Foundation. Mrs. Joseph Ostrainder, chariman of the union, will preside at the meeting.
SUNSHINE CLUB WILL GIVE BRIDGE PARTY
Members of the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside will give a colonial luncheon bridge party Wednesday at the Ethelynn tea room. Mrs. John Diggle is hostess, assisted by Mrs. Emma Sandbom, Mrs. J. C. Pritchett, Mrs. Thomas R. Lewis, Mrs. Frank Bird, Mrs. Fred Uhl, Mrs. Arthur Broomfield and Miss Louise Smith. Gives Birthday Party Mrs. Edgar E. Grayson entertained with a luncheon-bridge and birthday party Sunday at her home, 3671 Birchwood avenue, in honor of Mrs. Charles E. Oliver. Covers were laid for Mrs. Grayson, Mrs. Oliver, Mrs. Guy Thornburg, Mrs. Sam Blanchard, Mrs. Charles Redding, Mrs. Lester N. Nagley, Mrs. Max Shoemaker and Guy Thornburg Jr.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pattem No. 364 Size ..... Street ..... City ..... ..... Name ..... .....
DRESS IN CALICO PRINT This is a modification of the old fashioned mother hubbard dress, a one-piece affair. The square yoke is made by cutting in from armhole edges, both front and back, and the lower edges of these slashed openings gathered and joined to the upper edge. It’s easily slipped into, for It closes at center front under the applied band of plain blue calico. The plain blue is repeated in applied border of hem, Peter Pan collar and the cuff bands. * Style No. 364 is made with 1% yards of thirty-two-inch material with % yard of thirty-five-inch contrasting for the youngster of 4 years. Sprigged dimity in rose-pink tones on pale blue ground with plain blue organdie is very effective. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional for a copy of our new spring fashion magazine, just off the press. Luncheon Held by Club Group on Anniversary Woman’s Department Club, Municipal Gardens, celebrated its second anniversary Monday with luncheon at the clubhouse. Mrs. H. P. Willwerth, president, presided. The program was in charge of Mrs. Carl Shaffer. Mrs. E. A. Shirley. historian, told of the activities and accomplishments since the club’s organization. Mrs. O. G. Crank gave a reading, a tribute to the flag. Mrs. Elmer Kiefer, chairman of table decorations, was assisted by Mrs. John Phillips, Mrs. W. G. Hodgson and Mrs. Willwerth, in colonial costume.
PARTY TO BE GIVEN BY CITY SORORITY
Miss Rose Netherton is chairman of the guest bridge and bunco party to be given Sunday from 2 to 5 at the Lumley tea room by members of Alpha Nu chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority. The chairman will be assisted by Miss Evelyn Wolf and Miss Helen White. Decorations and appointments will be in red and white, the sorority colors. Miss Jean Davisson, pledge, will entertain with stunts and readings. The chapter will hold a business meeting at 6:30 Monday night at the Y. W. C. A.
WASHINGTON PARTY IS GIVEN BY CLUB
Artemus Club sponsored a George Washington party today for children at the Indianapolis Day Nursery. Imogene and Donald Sickbert, pupils of Mrs. Fred Miller, gave a group of readings, and Fred Baase entertained w'ith several piano numbers. Mrs. Charles Judy, chairman of the social committee, assisted by Mrs. Charles Mcßride and Mrs. D. H. Campbell, was in charge of arrangements. Slate Regular Meeting Phi Tau sorority will hold its regular business meeting at 8 o'clock tonight at the home of Miss Anna Donroese, 2420 Brookside parkway.
Reliance on Self Builds Character BY MARTHA LEE If it is true that the present generation of young men and women is the result of today’s grown-ups. it is true also that their attitude toward life in general, and their own lives in particular, is the indirect result of what they have learned, not so much through actual experience as through observation. If these young men and women, who soon are to be husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, have seen nothing all their lives but the struggle to satisfy material whims, they are going to understand that to be the ultimate aim of all life. If they have been educated to the idea that nothing in. the world counts quite so much as having plenty of money to buy and see and do all the things they want, that is what their souls and minds and bodies will seek above all else. And the results are disastrous. Don’t delude yourselves that they are not. Mothers and fathers of these young hopefuls just now are beginning to realize the folly of this materialistic attitude. Because their children just now are reaching the age where they show direct results of the training that has been pounded into their heads ever since they were old enough to understand words and look around and see things. Semblance of Balance The mothers and fathers had at least a semblance of a balance in their attitudes. They did not seem to reckon with the idea that perhaps the children, when they grew old enough to dope things out for themselves, might carry all these ideas a bit farther. The parents are the days between. They are the results of some good solid mid-Victor-ian policies, tempered with enough modernism to make them practical. But their young offspring, whom they wished to be so capable, so well armed for the battle of life, so acquainted with the ways of the world has of hurting us that they would be completely armed to battle those things, have turned around and thrown down the weapons and said they do not need the weapons because they do not believe in the same things their poor misguided parents do anyway, and that things they do not believe can not possibly hurt them. And the parents come erying. Dear Miss Lee—We have given our son every educational advantage. We have equipped him with an education that makes It possible for him to go into the business world as a professional man. We have sacrificed a great deal to do this because we did not want him to go through the struggle of getting on his financial feet that his father and I went through. Dislikes Profession And now he says he does not like the profession. He is indolent and lazy. He lives off what we give him. and he has done so all his life. We had planned on establishing him, so that he could marry and have a home and the happiness that marriage brings, without the worry of money matters, and he says he never intends to marry. He has the idea that marriage is not a way to happiness at all. but to misery. That intelligent peopfe do not marry because they are capable of making their own happiness. That intelligent men must be free. That is his excuse for not working. He says he can not bear the thought of being shackled to a desk for the rest of his life. And yet his standard of living requires that he have a great deal of money. The same thing is true of his friends, both boys and girls. They want everything for nothing. They want no responsibilities. and yet they want all the goodness and pleasure there is in life. WORRIED MOTHER. You’re realizing rather late that the training you and your husband have given your boy is the wrong thing altogether. How strange that you so completely should have forgotten the happiness that comes from working for things. How unfair of both of you to deny your boy the strength of character that is to be found in getting things for himself. About the only thing you can do now is to throw the boy completely j on his own. Make him earn every- j thing he has, even his room rent ; and food. It’s the only thing that J will save him from complete ennui, j And don’t soften the first time he j hasn’t any spending money or needs j anew suit.
GIVE RECEPTION FOR BISHOP AND WIFE
More than 400 gyests attended the reception given Tuesday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Baxter. 5110 North Meridian street, in honor of Bishop and Mrs. Edgar Blake. The affair was given by members of the Methodist Ministers’ Wives’ Association, of which Mrs. O. W. Fifer is president. * Assisting hostesses were presidents of the organizations of the Methodist churches of Indianapolis. Miss Delight Baxter, daughter of the hosts, who is attending De Pauw university, assisted. Mrs. Arthur Webber, harpist, presented the musical program. The house was decorated with palms, ferns and baskets of spring flowers.
CLUB’S ANIVERSARY TO BE OBSERVED
Second anniversary of the founding of the Sorelle Club will be celebrated with a dinner at 6:30 tonight at the Columbia Club. The table will be centered with a bowl of pink roses and lighted with pink tapers in silver candelabra. Covers will be laid for Mrs. Ray Thompson, Mrs. Cleo Diehm, Mrs. Thomas Newett, Mrs. Ray Brown. Mrs. R. G. Glilam, Mrs. Roland Hawkins, Miss Myrtle Clark, president; Miss Thelma Nieman. Miss Daisy Voyles, Miss Ella Wagner, Miss Helen Schell and Miss Betty O’Brien.
LUNCHEON HEAD
Mrs. Charles W. Coneway
Decorations for the colonial luncheon, being given at 12:30 Thursday at the Columbia Club by members of the Indiana Woman’s Republican Club, are in charge of Mrs. Charles W. Coneway. Elza Rogers will talk on "Politics in General and Indiana Politics in Particular.”
ALPHA ZETA CHI TO GIVE RUSH PARTY
Alpha Zeta Chi sorority will entertain with a rush party at 7:30 tonight at the home of Miss Thelma Brown, 1007 Parker avenue. Miss Voltairena Matthews and Miss Ruth Rugh will assist the hostess. Rushees are Miss Rebecca Victor, Miss Marjorie Peggs, Miss Geraldine Shaw, Miss Margaret Reid, Miss Mary Lou Cox, Miss Lucille Bailey, Miss Dorotha Prince, Miss Elizabeth Moore and Miss Eileen Bennett.
BUFFET SUPPER IS GIVEN FOR LEAGUE
Mrs. S. N. Campbell, 321 Blue Ridge road, entertained members of the board of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters with a radio buffet supper at her home Tuesday night, when they listened to the voters’ service program of the national league, broadcast every Tuesday night. Miss Florence Harrison, Chicago, fourth regional director of the national league, who has been spending several days in the city, was a guest at the supper. Sh#went to Ft .Wayne today to speak at the open meeting of the recently organized league there. She will go to South Bend and Gary to confer the league officials in those cities. State Sorority Meeting to Be Held March 15 Announcements of the state meeting of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority have been sent Indiana members. The meeting will be held at the Claypool. March 15. A luncheon at 12:30 will be followed by a program celebrating the sixtieth anniversary of the sorority’s founding. A dance will be held at night. Committee in charge of the luncheon and program arrangements consists of Mrs. L. H. Millikan, Mrs. Carl S. Wagner, Mrs. Robert Brewer and Mrs. Howard Caldwell. Mrs. De Forest O’Dell, acting president, will preside at the luncheon. Mrs. George Harrison is dance chairman. Schedule Card Party Mrs. Gaylord O. Beard, 4317 East Washington street, will be hostess for the regular business meeting of the Sigma Delta Rho sorority tonight. Final plans will bemade for a card party to be given March 3 at the Spink-Arms.
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1930
Club Group Observes Its Anniversary Mrs. A. E. -Shirley. 3020 North Illinois street, was hostess for the celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Wednesday Afternoon Club at her ! home today. One hundred and guests attended. Mrs. H. E. Schwab presided. Mrs Eva M. Wright, first president, gave the club history. The club was : organized in 1905 as a social club, but three years later it became a | literary club, studying literature and j the Bible. Mrs. Charles’ W. Wherlev I was founder and Mrs. E. H. Thomp- | son has been Bible teacher for the last seventeen years. Charter members were Mrs. Elizabeth Bradford. Mrs. Lulu Horn, Mrs. Otis Trotter, Mrs. Charles H. j Trotter. Mrs. E. H. Washburn, Mrs. ; Allen Johns, Mrs. William Harmon, I Mrs. A. E. Shirley, Mrs. Samuel j Schuck. Mrs. M. A. Zeller, Mrs. 1 Wehrley, Mrs. Eva M. Wright, Mrs. : William L. Hobbs, Mrs. Wert Dark, i Mrs. Irwin C. Dark, Rochester. N. Y. I Miss Eeatrice Batty, accompanied ! by Mrs. James Wynne, gave a proj gram of songs. Charter members | were presented with corsages bv Mrs. C. W. Shaffer. Shower Is Given for Bride-Elect Mrs. Charles E. Thomas, 738 GraI ham avenue, entertained with a | bridge party and miscellaneous shower at her home Tuesday night in honor of Miss Eleanor Flowers, whose marriage to William Walter Behrman will take place in March. Decorations and appointments were carried out in yellow and orchid. Mrs. Thomas’ guests were Mrs. Charles E. Flowers, mother of the bride-elect; Mrs. Clifford Wright, Mrs. Justus Paul, Mrs. Mildred Douglas, Mrs. William Hunt, Miss Martha Flowers, Miss Virginia Flowers, Miss Marjorie Goble, Miss Truth Wakeman and Miss Blanche Rose. Mrs. Clifford Wright will entertain Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Flowers. Mrs. R. L. McNair and Mrs. O. C. Flowers will be hostesses for a party Tuesday. Sunday, March 9, Miss Virginia Flowers, Miss Marjorie Goble, Miss Truth Wakeman and Miss Dorothy Krieg will entertain at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house in her honor. Regular Meeting Set Regular meeting of the Bonnie Amie Club will be held at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth McCoy, 6140 Indianapolis avenue, Thursday.
Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home
Here is the famous old recipe which millions of housewives have found to be the most dependable means of breaking up a stubborn, lingering cough. It takes but a moment to prepare and costs little, hut it gives real relief even for those dreaded coughs that follow severe cold epidemics. From any druggist, get. 2 1/2 ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of better remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so good that even children like it. Not only does this simple mixture soothe and heal the inflamed throat membranes with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood, and acts directly upon the bronchial tubes, thus aiding the whole system in throwing off the cough. It loosens the germladen phlegm and eases chest soreness in a way that is really astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine is more helpful in cases of distressing coughs, chest colds, and bronchial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Pinex. Tt is guaranteed to give prompt relief money refunded. —Advertisement.
Could Hard Do Her Work “When I started taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I could hardly do my housework. I was so nervous and weak from Change of Life that I had to lie down very often. I heard about the Vegetable Compound in a booklet which was left at my door. I am doing all the housework for a family of four and it keeps me on my feet. I have taken six bottles and I have gained strength and flesh.” —Minnie E Hicks, R. R. #2, Rushville, Indiana.
