Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 278, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1930 — Page 6
PAGE 6
STATE BUSINESS, PROFESSIONAL WOMEN TO MEET HERE
Session to Be Held on May 10-12 Interest in the state convention of the Business and Professional Woman s Club centers in the election of new state officers, which will be held the last day of the meeting. The sessions will be held at the Claypool May 10, 11 and 12. Mrs. Bonnie K. Robertson, Hammond. president of the state organization, will preside. Mrs. Ada O. Frost, local president, and convention chairman, w'ith the ail of her committee, has arranged a varied program for the visitors. Following registration Saturday, there will be a reception in the Riley room, after which a midnight vaudeville show, featuring a minstrel act, blues singers and Louise Powell s Kiddie Revue, will be presented. Vocational Luncheons Slated The international breakfast will be held Sunday morning at 8:30 in the Riley room, Miss Mary Kennedy, Lafayette, presiding, and Miss Clara Berns, Indianapolis, acting as hostess. The churches will have special sermons for the convention guests. Sunday noon, vocational luncheons will be held in different rooms of the hotel, presided over by the various local committee chairmen. Special speakers will be provided for these luncheons. In the afternoon, the visitors will be guests of local club members on a drive through the city, ending at the Womans Department Club house for tea. Sunday night, a speaker of international renown will address the entire group in the assembly room at the hotel. The name of this speaker has not yet been announced. Monday morning, the women will get down to serious business. After an 8 o’clock breakfast for past presidents, at which Miss Nell Allemond, first state president, will preside, a business session will be held. Election will take place between 11:30 and 2 o'clock. Mrs. Sears to Be Speaker The results of the election will be made known at the banquet in the evening. -Club Mechanics’ luncheons, with State committee chairmen as speakers am/ local committee chairmen as hostesses, will be held Monday noon. Then, after another business sesssion from 2 *o 5, the closing banquet will be given at 6:30 in the Riley room. Mrs. Elizabeth Sears, New York, former editor of the Woman's Home Companion, The Independent Woman and present chairman of the national public relations committee. will be principal speaker. The organization is one of the largest in the state, with a state membership of more than 3.600 and a local enrollment of over 300. There are seventy-one chapters in the state.
MRS, DUVALL HONORS DAUGHTER AT PARTY
Mrs. John L. Duvall, 6325 Bellefontaine street, entertained with a bunco party Monday night at her home in celebration of the twelfth birthday anniversary of her daughter. Margaret Roberta. The table at serving time ‘was centered vith a large birthday cake. Pink sweet peas were used in decorating. Paper carnival hats were given as favors. Guests included Miss Gladys Scott, Miss June Wayland, Miss Elizabeth Clifford, Miss Farietta Betz emit, Miss Marcia Gross, Miss Rosemary Allison. Miss Evelyn Hai'ih. Miss Margaret Haigh. Miss Geraldine Jackson and Miss Helen Blue. ,t ppoint Delegates Ladies’ auxiliary to United Commercial Travelers will meet at 7:30 Saturday night ;.t the Woman’s Department Club. 1702 North Meridian street. Delegates to the state convention to be held at Lafayette May 15. 16 and 17 will bo appointed. (,Vr Luncheon Bridge Members and guests of Avalon Country Club will be entertained with a luncheon bridge party at 1 o’clock Thursday afternoon. Mrs. A. S Rowe, assisted by Mrs. O. F. Hammer, will be in charge of the affair. Meeting Is Slated Meeting of Sigma Sigma Kappa sorority will meet at - Wednesday night at the Chamber of Commerce building. lliwlt —and get the fruit nourishment and mineral salts your body needs. The quick Welch way! Simply pour into fcneakfast glasses the Pure Juice of Luscious Concords lievcrv pint, six liberal portions morr If diluted with one-third water, and many preterit so Less than 5c a portion! Askfot Welch'* on your“club breakfast "It's pure, unadulterated grape luice. pasteurised fat nni to trrvr ITVtrfc’s - FREE writ* H tW'i, Drpt. P , Wntfield* A. f.
Welch's CRAPE JUICE.
dtx W ( "INTERPRETS V MODE A sort of chartreuse shantung, with noticeably smart neckline, clever stitching and almost inevitable flare. ■ (Courtesy of Doupuy-Magain, Paris.)
ifn\ fKi 111 /[uj PARIS, April 1. r / rHE new waistlines are hard to s-* manage, I’ll have to admit. Oh. V ) |l course, if you are young and fA I XT, £ q thesome and hipless, then they i/y. | ; 1 TANARUS, - e no problem—T have it on the 11 l I _____ :ry best authority. But most of \j 5 aren’t. L \ •XT i MAVmol B’CJIcIIIIIP
PARIS, April 1. THE new waistlines are hard to manage. I’ll have to admit. Oh. of course, if you are young and lithesome and hipless, then they are no problem —I have it on the very best authority. But most of us aren’t. Yet a below normal waistline shrieks out loud of being last year s | and nothing else, and none of us : are ready to just give up and say, “Oh, well, let it be a normal waistline, then, and why worry?” Nor are we quite willing to show our figures at what we are forced to consider a disadvantage, which is what a normal waistline does to them, especially if it is belted rather tightly This is the reason more than any other why many of the clever couturiers are carrying the waistline even to above normal, and then balancing the silhouette by making I the shoulders and just under the arms of these garments rather loose and masculine looking. For it stands to reason that a i dress belted slightly above the normal waist is going to be more flat- ; tering to the hips than one belted just above them. ST St St WHEN chartreuse green silk shantung comes from Doupuj Mangnin, and when it is stitched, I and when it is an ensemble, and when we sketch it for you as wc did today, then spring is here again, tra-la! So also is smartness and chic, and now aren't you glad you read the Dare column! a a tt FOR the spring and early summer business dress there is nothing I recommend more heartily than black or navy very smartly and simply made with medium long hem—and collars and cuffs. Because unusual collars and cuff-s are seen everywhere in Paris on smart women this season, and you may go straight from your office to tea or dinner without the slightest compunction about your dress. tt tt tt But collars and cuffs arc new, and very elaborate—and you’ll just have to send a 2-cent stamp to the Dare Department of The Times to find out what they are and how to make them —sets of lame ilah-mayl of pearls, of paillettes. of straws and braids—real j ideas, these, better send for them. a a tt AS a contradiction to sleeveless dresses for country wear, many of the summer dinner and dance I dresses have tiny cap sleeves of I short sleeves, or even long sleeves. Au Revoir!
PERSONALS
Mrs. Bonnie Robertson, state president of the Business and Professional Woman's Club, will come April 10, to speak at the meeting of the local club. Miss Gladys Riddle. Connersville. district chairman, will also attend the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Scott. 1236 'Wright street, have returned from Miami, Fla., where they have been : spending the winter months. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Tinder, who have been in Miami during the • winter, have returned to their home ] in Anderson, where Mr. Tinder, for- : merly of Indianapolis, is golf pro- ! fessional at the Anderson Country Club. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Sullivan. 1431 North Meridian street, have returned from New York, where they spent the last few weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Carl B. Shafer, 33 East Thirty-sixth street, have returned from Florida with their children. Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Fuller. 3645 Watson road, have as their guest A. V. Utica, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. William Averill Johnson. 2134 North Alabama street, are spending several days at French Lick Springs. Bridge Club to Meet Trumps Bridge Club will meet at 3 Thursday night at the Lumley tearoom. This is the last meeting |of the season. All members are
Miss Lauter Is Named Leader of Committee At a board meeting of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters, held Monday at the home of the president, Mrs. Thomas D. Sheer in, 3110 North Delaware street, Miss Sara Lauter was named chairman of a committee to draft anew constitution for tire local league. General plans for the program next year were outlined. Arrangements include a limited number of open meetings and the s S' n ”” plan as it was worked out this year. Both the program for next year and the new constitution will be brought before members at the annual meeting to be held at the Woodstock Club in M" 1- . Anew series of study group meetings will beg n Fropylaeum. Topics to be discussed will’ include the importance of voting in the primary, offices to be filled and the discussion of the merits of both the primary and convention systems of nominating. Hold Pledge Services Pledge services for Miss Florence D.uley will be held at a meeting of Theta Delta sorority. Alpha chapter, at a meeting of the chapter Wednesday night at the home ot Miss Jane Wise, 526 East Twentyfourth street.
*IOO-2? b e Paid /■ Recipes! m 28 Indianapolis Ladies to share prizes this month for new uses for Just let us know the novel ways j[J (o) 11 C\c\ you use POMAL or the deli- 0C 0 . Mu\ cious POMOLAY made from (j A^-- D it, and you may win a splendid cash prize! Your dealer has or can get POMAL for you —try J it today and send in your favor- * STRAWBERRY, RULES OF THE CONTEST T-ao> | Tmi P Frmt RY "~ Tell in 100 words or less, a novel way in which j (KLx lUiftlMX Flavors— WM\ you’ve used Pomal or Pomolay. Send as many sugi /Si I Oil Also Mint 118 l gestion? as you wish, cn separate sheets, with name 1 JL ViM and address, before April 50. All entries become our • IfflljL Wlnll l\ n|H property for publication. W inners to be announced I ID'* and awards made in May, as follows: First prize f HCWXSX\\ \H \\lis\ M $25; Second 515; Third $10; The next five prices 111 ft,. || l®\ HHHI l\n|l 55 each; The next five prizes 52 each; The next \m\mil \\W \\M\ |H fifteen prizes $1 each. Total 28. Him LVI lil M’.MiIPI I\ M\ lyll! 1\ W !l\ M\ \\bK\ 3271.3289 Spring Grove Avenue - Cincinnati, Ohio
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Rink Turned Into Scene of Carnival Riverside skating rink was transformed into a carnival scene Monday night, when members of the Alpha Latreian Club entertained with their second annual skating party for the benefit of the childrens nutrition camp at Bridgeport. As if the skating alone was not entertainment enough. Miss Jennie Thompson, palmist, and Mrs. Edwards, horoscope reader, added to the pleasure of the evening, and Miss Martha Jolliffe, student at the Herron Art school, cut silhouettes of the skaters. A feature of the evening, was the dances of Louise Powell and Allan Carey. Alfred Rodecker, who acted as master of ceremonies, awarded the prizes. Mrs. Karl Nessler was general chairman of the affair, assisted by Mrs. Alan W. Boyd, Mrs. Howard Feiber, Mrs. Robert Coleman, Miss Elizabeth Matthews and Miss Louise Wills. Mrs. Louis Hensley was chairman of stunts and entertainment.
Bride-Elect Is Honor Guest at Shower Fete Miss Dorothy Boone, whose marriage to Alfred C. Eggert will take place Easter Sunday, was the honor guest at a miscellaneous shower and party given Monday night by Mrs. Paul W. Eggert and her daughter, Mrs. Francis D. Gregg, at Mrs. Eggert’s home. 722 Orange street. Peach, green and orchid, the bridal colors, were used in appointments. The table was centered with a miniature . bridal party. Numbered hearts, suspended from an umbrella, gave clews to the hiding places of the shower gifts. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. Omer Boone, were Mrs. Homer Gregg, Mrs. Henry Mueller, Mrs. Louise Poll?. Mrs. Charles Conyers, Mrs. Emma Wint- ! ringham, Mrs. Roy Harmon, Mrs. Wilbert Eggert, Mrs. Alvin Eggert, Mrs. Walter Eggert, Mrs. Philip Mattern and Miss Phyllis Mattern. Entertain Wives Members of the St. James Conclave, No. 16, Red Cross of Constantine, entertianed their wives with a dinner at the Columbia Club | Monday night. This was the spring j meeting of the group. Arrange Program Members of the Fayette Club will | imke plans for the coming year at a neeting to be held at 2 o'clock ; Fi xdaj afternoon in the parlors of the Fletcher Ameiican Bank build- ! ing. Mothers' Club Meets Mrs. Charles McNaull talked before members of the Sigma Chi Mothers’ Club at a meeting held this afternoon at the chapter house, 714 Berkley road. Hold Easter Bazar . Ladies’ Auxiliary to the Caledo- | nian Club will hold its regular meet- | ing at 2 Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Charles Schlegel, 4615 Winthrop avenue. The annual Easter bazar will be held following the business meeting. Hold Regular Meeting Regular meeting of Omicron Beta Gamma sorority will be held Wednesday night at the home of I Mrs. Paul Ferguson, 824 South Me- ; ridian street. Plans will be made 1 for a slumber party.
BLACK MAGIC IN SPRING GARB Chic Negligee.. “Sunday Night" Frock
I -jgeMSfovx m ■ <y ; . &&*<&■ J ; : %.
There’s sheer beauty in new black styles! Left—The negligee goes formal and gracious in a surplice cut of gold dotted rayon marquisette with trailing olack chiffon sleeves and two rippling layers of black chiffon forming a train.
Card Party to Be Held Friday for Candidate Democratic precinct committee women of Washington township will be hostesses for a card party to be given Friday at 2 in Johnson's building, 5251 College avenue, in honor of Mrs. Bruce Maxwell, candidate for trustee of Washington township. Special guests at the party wall be Mrs. Margaret L. Shuler, candidate for recorder of Marion county: Mrs. Anna Records, candidate for trustee of Lawrence township, and Miss Faye Terrell, candidate for trustee of Center township. The committee in charge of the party is headed by Mrs. Oiive Belden Lewis, chairman: members are Mrs. Frank Coyle, Mrs. C. L. Steinmeier, Mrs. John Bingham, Mrs. Harvey R. Belton, Mrs. Willard Worrell and Mrs. Frank Wooling.
MUSICALE TO MEET AT PROPYLAEUM
Reservations fdr the annual luncheon and business meeting of the active section of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, to be held at 1 Thursday afternoon at the Propylaeum. may be made with Mrs. Harvey B. Martin, 1631 Park avenue. A musical program will be given following the luncheon. Mrs. Robert I Blakeman. recently re-elected president of the Martinee Musicale, will preside. Annual reports of all committees will be given.
Right—The Sunday night supper hostess will find herself perfectly at home in this Sunday night frock of black rayon fish net, made princess, with flaring skirt below the tight hipline and graceful circular cuffs finishing long sleeves.
BRIDE-ELECT TO BE SHOWER GUEST
Miss Irene Stewart will entertain with a personal shower and bridge party tonight at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Madge McMillan, whose marriage to John Williams will take place Easter Sunday. Guests with the bride-elect will be Mrs. Pauline Edney, Mrs. Mary Doyal. Miss Pauline Wilson, Miss Charlotte Sharpe, Miss Martha Borden, Miss Frances Kirkham, Miss Helen Alworth, Miss Melba Klipinstine, Miss Ann Tate and Miss Mary Regula. Rush Party to Be Held Delta Tau Omega sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Virginia Maus, 1857 North Harding street. This will be the thira and last of a series of rush parties. The committee in charge includes Miss Lillian Peterman, Miss Virginia Stringer and Miss Mildred Cox. Owl Club to Meet Miss Mary Regula, 2062 Ashland avenue, will entertain members of the Owl Club at her home Wednesday night.
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Mellet to Speak A meeting of the Elizabeth Club of the All Souls Unitarian church will be held Wednesday at the home of Mrs. William Roland Allen, 130 Berkley road. John C. Mellett will be the speaker. Sorority to Meet Beta Tau sorority will hold a meeting Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Harry A. Meyer, 22 North Sherman drive.
t Natural Loveliness Brought Out With a PARIS PERMANENT Before this famous permanent goes back to the original price of $7.50 may we suggest that you u/ ■uht make your appointment now for one of these soft, natural and gleaming waves at only 10 Finger Waves If We Shampoo 970 ° 31 E. Ohio St. Lincoln 6867 TVayps C.lven in the F.veiling by^\pp<UntnT<Mit____ | _
APRIL 1, 1930
Shower to Be Held for Bride-Elect Miss Norma Ernstii*g will entertain with a miscellaneous shower and party tonight at her home. 1126 Wodlawn avenue, in honor of Miss Anna Emsting, whose marriage to Fred Sheehan will take place April 12. Orchid and green, the bridal colors. will be used in decorations and appointments. Guests, with the bride-elect, will include Mrs. George Sheridan, Miss George Pugh. Mrs. Leonard Holilt, Mrs. Fred Kopler, Mrs. Louis De Langlade, Mrs. Carl Barnes, Mrs. Douglas Brushwetler, Mrs. Ralph Lvnch, Mrs. Malcolm Carlisle. Mrs. John Sheehan. Mrs. Robert Hertz, Mrs. Frank Kerps. Mrs. William Ernsting Jr.. Mrs. W. H. Eikenberry, Miss Edna Hollowed. Miss Jean Adamson, Miss Dorothy Felton and Miss Lucille Dichman. Mrs. Herman Ernsting. 1305 Woodlawn avenue, entertained with a green kitchen shower Monday ' night, in honor of Miss Ernsting, ■ Her guests included Mrs. Eiken- | berry, Mrs. William Ernstin Sr., : Miss Mildred Wessel. Miss Jane ' Held. Miss Minnie Ziegler, Miss j Lola Lazott, Miss Norma Ernsting ! and Miss Helen Ernsting. The hostess was assisted by her j daughters, Dorothy and Hermine.
Actors’ Guild to Give Dinner Party Tonight Actors and Workers Guild will sponsor a dinner tonight at the Propylaeum for members and friends, preceding the opening performance of “The Silver Cord, the current presentation of the Civic theater. Mrs. George Finfrock will be hostess. Reservations are in charge of Miss Helen Coffey. Reservations have been made for Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fishman and party; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Goodman and party; Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Harrison and party; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar 3auer and party; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Overly, Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer Furscott, Mrs. Walter D. Baker and party; Mrs. Everett Schofield, Mrs. Stephen Bogert, Miss Louise Jaeger and party; Miss Florence Howell and party; Miss Elaena Lauter, and Miss Sally Lauter. _
