Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1930 — Page 6

PAGE 6

SMART WOMEN BESTOW THEIR FAVOR ON NAVY BLUE

Ensemble Is Big, Hit of Season BY ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA aerxlce Writer PARIS. July 2—While some of the less fragile pastel shades are considered correct, for town wear this summer, it is remarkable how much navy blue is seen on smart women at afternoon functions. The new yellows, greens and lighter blues are all charming, but It is difficult to equal the smartness of a navy blue ensemble. With black, it remains the really chic choice this season, and every woman who has voted for navy blue is sure to enjoy her decision. Navy blue and its variety of intermediary shades still are featured extensively in the latest mid-season collections, for informal wear as well as for the afternoon and evening Evening Gowns Charming Some of the couturiers have shown delightful navy blue taffeta evening gowns that are charming and so smart, besides offering a novelty in the color line. Deep blue lace, without being quite so lark as navy, is featured by Chanel and there are a number of midnight blues to be seen in tulle, mousseline and georgette. Light navy crepe de chine or marocain fashion lovely afternoon clothes, as for instance a long caped wTap created by Louiseboulanger trimmed with biege fox or again a taffeta ensemble by Jean Patou, composed of a three-quarter length jacket and dress, with touches of lace at the collar and cuffs as well as on the large picture hat of the same fabric. While and Pink Csed White and pink ars usually combined with all the dark shades of blue very successfully, especially Patou's rose opaline." In the printed designs, irregular polka dots in white, pink and even green on a dark blue ground are seen, as well as every variety of 1 lue end white checks. The accessories of a matching blue are “de rigneur” blue opera pumps piped in white or gray, or low plain blue tie shoes that are smarter than any complicated style. Navy blue straws of every possible origin and trimmed with soft white kid— a mode* worn by Florence Walton—are a pleasing change from the übiquitous black straw and are very becoming, too. Marcella Lely shows a light navy bakou shape and a floppy white tulle trim stitched with blue silk exactly matching the straw which rtrikes a very novel note.

Miss Clevenger Becomes Bride of John Kelly Marriage of Miss Frieda Edytha Clevenger to John Robert Kelly took place Tuesday morning at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral. The Rev. Elmer Ritter, pastor officiated. Mrs. Walker Gardner, matron of honor, wore a tan ensemble and carried pink .oses. Eugene S. Kelly, Muncie, brother of the bridegroom, was best man The bride wore a periwinkle blue suit with accessories to match and carried Johanna Hill roses and lilies of the valley. Following the ceremony, a wedding breakfast was served at the Marrott. Mr. and Mrs. Kelly have gone on a motor trip to New York and Quebec and will be at home after July 16 at 1 East Thirty-sixth street.

VISITORS TO CITY GUESTS AT DINNER Officers and directors of the Rotary Club and their wives gave a dinner Tuesday night at the Highland Golf and Country Club in honor of Mrs. William de Cock Buning and her daughter, Miss Emy de Cock Buning, The Hague, Holland. Miss Omie Harris. 3510 Washington boulevard, entertained with a luncheon bridge at the Meridian Hills Country Club Tuesday afternoon in honor of Miss Buning. Guests were Miss Hilda Griffith. Miss Mary Lloyd. Miss Virginia Lloyd, Miss Virginia Hitz, Miss Nelda Rith and Miss Lillian Young. Meeting Is Called Federated Patriotic Society. Grand Army of the Republic, will have a called meeting Wednesday at 7:45 at Ft. Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. Business of importance will be transacted in regard to the annual picnic for all Marion county veterans of the Civil war. Reports of the convention will be heard. Mrs. Lulu Hartzog president, will preside.

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NOTES OF SOCIETY FOLK

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dana Rollings, Evansville, will spend the week-end in Indianapolis, the guest j of Mrs. Rollings' mother. Mrs. Sarah Finneran. 2956 Princeton place. Miss Marian Whitney. 5869 Lowell avenue, is visiting friends in Ohio. Mrs. William Francis Fox. Golden 1 Hill, is in Detroit, visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore MacManus. Miss Eileen O'Conner. 1423 North Pennsylvania street, and Miss Ann Carroll. 2355 North Pennsylvania street, will spen H the week-end in Sullivan, where they will be the guests of Miss Charlotte Kerlin. Mr. and Mrs. T. pordon Kelly. 1 East Thirty-sixth street, will motor 1 to Chicago to spend the Fourth with Mrs. Kelley's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Garrity. Miss Katherine Garrity will return with them for a visit. Miss Rachel Tobin will leave Thursday for Muncie to spend a few days with Mr. and Mrs. James Kennedy. Dr. and Mrs. Vincent Lapenta, Miss Catherine Lapenta and Biagio Lapenta. 2424 Park avenue, will motor to Wawasee for the week-end. Mrs. Ellen Kennedy. 1615 North Talbot street, has gone to Marion, where she will visit her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Broderick. ’ Miss Gretchen Mueller Miss Margaret Kennedy, and Miss Margaret Barrett will leave this week for New York where they will attend the Columbia university summer school. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Livingston, New York, returned Sunday, after a visit with Mr. Livingston’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George A. Livingston, 6126 Central avenue. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Abraham and Miss Hazel Jean Abraham, 4086 North Illinois street, are in Mobile, Ala., visiting their daughter, Mrs. Patrick Fiore and Mr. Fiore. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph V. Ferrari, and their children Margaret and Joseph Ferrari Jr., will arrive Sunday for a few' days with Mrs. Ferrari's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Tynan, 222 East Fifteenth street, before going to Lake Tippecanoe, where they w-ill spend the summer. Miss Elizabeth Tynan will arrive Friday from New York for a visit with her parents. Mrs. Ada Mansfield, Columbia Club, has gone to New York to spend the summer. Mrs. Robert E. Sweeney, Miss Caroline Sweeney and Robert E. Sweeney Jr„ will leave next week for Walloon Lake. Mich., where they have a summer home. Mrs. A. F. Sutton and her son, John Sutton, 3943 Ruckle street, wdll leave next Wednesday for Chicago and a visit with her brother,

C_lX* / T f Yntekprets

PARIS, July 2. T TOW many women have beauti- -*• ful arms, necks and shoulders? Well, so few of us have that I think we would better, one and all, drop this column and go to the mirror and be ruth!* s! • HOW DO YOU LOOK IN EVENING CLOTHES? Don't fool yourself about it, because you can't fool anybody else. Your mirror will tell you. side, front and back, and don’t think for a moment that the mirror is any harsher than the million women who see the same picture. And don't despair, either, because there is so very much you can do about it. One of the most flattering styles ever given us is that of the little evening capes, coats and boleros. They weren't originated. I'm sure, t- be flattering to unbeautiful ar ~ nd necks. I am rather inclined to thin': that they were invented t- keep off those chill breezes and drafts that have a way of reminding us of how comfortable a man’s evening things are. Another use that these little jacket things have is to render a formal evening gown very much less formal. There are always times and places where bare arms and decolletagcs look too very

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Robert Bennet Jr., and Mrs. Bennet in Rock Island, 111. Mrs. Mary Wilhite left for New York today, where she will study the pipe organ during the summer. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Fischer, 18 East Fortieth street, have returned from their ranch in New Mexico. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Everson. 122 East Twenty-secod street, have as their guest their daughter. * l ss Marjorie Everson, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Ken M. Mosiman and family. 3402 Carrollton avenue, will leave Sunday for Sarnia, Canada, where they will stay for a month. Miss Louise Allen, Cold Springs road, is in Paris, 111., where she is the house guest of Miss Frances Williams.

Miss Florence Irwin, 5102 College avenue, will go to South Bend for over the Fourth. The Rev. and Mrs. George Shepard Southw'orth, 5318 North Delaware street, are at Camp Hiawatha, Mich., for an extended stay. Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Miller and family, 5234 North New Jersey street, will leave Thursday for a stay of several weeks at Pentw'ater, Mich. Among the Indianapolis folk at the Edgewater Beach hotel. Chicago, are Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Fitzgerald and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Widlar. Miss A. Grace Hawk, 4731 Washington boulevard, will land at Montreal, Canada, Friday after a trip through Europe. She was a delegate to the national convention of the Woman’s Overseas Service League, which recently met in Paris. Miss Hawk is the editor of “Carry On,” the national magazine of the organization. Other Indiana women with Miss Hawks were Miss Nelle Baldwin, Greenfield; Miss Ruth Dillon, Miss Nelle Burch, Miss Aline Mergy of Terre Haute and Miss Adda Frances Goodwin, Newcastle. Miss Nelle Taylor, Tusola, 111., accompanied the Indiana delegation. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence N. Helm and son Russell, 5164 Broadway, have returned from a stay at the Cavalier hotel, Virginia Beach, Va. Among the Indianapolis men who are attending the western insurance bureau conference at the Wawasee hotel and Country Club, Lake Wawasee, are R. D. Furgason. D. L. Jones. Ross A. Moore, A. B. Muchant, H. F. Sweeney, I J. Solon, D. B. Stephens, George S. Valentine Jr. and W. S. Yaber Midi Seitz Hostess Beta chapter. Sigma Delta Zeta sorority, will hold a social meeting tonight at ‘he home of Miss Margaret Seitz, 951 East Morris street.

much like they shouldn’t, if you see what I mean. And, I think, if we ready heed what the mirror says about this question, most of us will install a couple of little evening jackets, toule suite! non For Him THE man’s town coat is oftenest light beige in color. And his shirt matches the suit, has a short starched front and rounded cuffs. The collar must be etiflf. very low in front, and very open, with rather long points—except when the summer sun is too and he just must wear his soft shirt and collar without pleats. non We can’t bear to think of you spoiling your figure with just any old brassiere! Not when 'eminine curves are more modish than ever —and you are told how to make the most de-e-e-e-e-vine model in this week’s illustrated leaflet waiting at the Dare Department of The Times for your request and a 2-cent stamp. The leaflet tells you how to make a brassiere and garter combination for evening wear, another one crocheted for daytime, and one of tulle or ribbon, You will find your favorite ir"del in one of these!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

700 Will Go to Gary for Club Session - A distinguished group of national , officers, six state presidents and j more than seven hundred delegates i and guests will be in Gary July 10 ! to 13 to attend the three-day rei gional convention of Business and ■ Professional Women’s Clubs, ac- ; cording to an announcement made I by Miss Emma Claus, Gary, chairman in charge of arrangements. Lena Madesin Phillips. New York, honorary national president; Miss Marian McClench. Ann Arbor, national president; Emily Kneubuhl, New York, executive secretary; Elizabeth Sears, New York, chairman of national relations committee: Ruth Rich, national field secretary; Martha Connole, East St. Louis, national legislative chairman, are among those who have accepted invitations to attend. Six Presidents to Attend

State presidents of the six states holding the joint conference include Clara Mae Ward. Wisconsin; Alice M. McCarthy. Minnesota; Mary Brumfield. Michigan; Dorothy McKee, Iowa; Mrs. Verna Huber. Illinois and Miss Mabel E. Ward, Indiana. Convention talks will stress the international relations among business women. On the opening night of the conference, an international pageant will be presented on the lagoon in Marquette park. Floats on boats, national costumes, songs and dances will be among the features. Miss Loretta Nolnor, Gary, is chairman of this event. Vocational round table conferences, club mechanics luncheons and general sessions are scheduled for Friday and Saturday. A trip through the steel mills, a drive through the Dunes followed by tea at the Dune Acre club house, several addresses by prominent speakers, six individual state dinners, a 1 sightseeing trip through the Calumet region and a final banquet Saturday night are other features of the three-day meet. Mrs. Robertson to Preside Mrs. Bonnie K. Robertson, Hammond, regional chairman for the convention and retiring state president of the Indiana federation, will preside at most of the meetings. Friday night, the Gary public schools will present an entertainment for the guests of the convention at Horace Mann auditorium. Jack Gilroy, director of physical education, will be in charge. More than 200 school children will take part. Combined girls’ bands of Emerson and Horace Mann schools will present a concert. Students of Ambridge school will give a play. Flora Philley of Froebel school is chairman of the committee in charge of the pageant, assisted by Rebecca Grabiel, Astrid Olson, Edna Schroeder, Blanche Liggett, Ann Pfeiffer, Marjorie Stoner and Evelyn Waite.

CARD PARTIES

Social Club of Sacred Heart church will play lotto and bunco at 2:15 Thursday at St. Cecelia’s clubrooms. Altar Society of St. Roch's church will hold its regular tournament card party £n the hall, 3600 South Meridian street, Sunday afternoon and night. Mrs. Jake Niedenthal wall be hostess, assisted by Mesdames Laborn Hendrix, John Beyer, Sam Peters, C. Isenhauer, Albert Hotz, William McMann, Jake Wachtel R. H. Schnider and George Gantz. Supper will be served from 5 to 7. Free transportation will be provided to and from the South Meridian car line. St. Patrick’s Social Club will entertain with cards at 2:30 Thursday afternoon at the hall, Prospert street. Calls Board Meeting Mrs. Elizaoeth Atkinson, president of the Indiana Women s Republican Club, has called a meeting of the executive board for Thursday. Luncheon will be served at 12:30. All members oi the board are requested to attend, as important business will be taken up.

Elegance in Eating Corn, Chicken Out BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON To a reader's query regarding the i proper behavior with fried chicken. ;an etiquette authority says, “At | times a small piece may be grasped. I with simple elegance, in the fingers j and transferred slowly to the j mouth." Now. usually I dislike getting into j any disputes with these etiquette j dispensers, but I'm here to say that ! w’hen it comes to either fried chickj en or roasting ears, simple elegance j has no place on the program. ! Os course, I realize that a great many people do not know what these edibles are. They eat in restaurants and hotels and have their fowls brought to uhem quartered or halved and reposing gracefully on a piece of soggy toast, with lovely paper frills to distract attention from the quality of the meat.

Simple to Elegance—Y'es And they must needs, in order to conform to the demands of elegance, have cute little holders for their corn. Simple elegance they have in quantities, I grant you, but little gastronomic enjoyment! In the first place, it's practically impossible to get chicken that tastes like chicken in any large city. Lots of it is rabbit. The same goes for roasting ears. F’eld corn merely masquerades under the name. I verily believe that one of the things that ails the prosperous city dweller is the fact that all the freshness has disappeared from his food before t gets to him. Look Them in the Eye He has to concoct all kinds of strange sauces in order to drown the wooden taste of his vegetables and the lack of flavor in his fowls. Fried chicken that is fried chicken must be alive and on the hoof twenty-four hours before it is eaten. Slay at night and cook next evening. This is the ideal method. And the only corn that is worth shucks is the kind that is plucked from the stalks at 10 a. m. and eaten at noon, dripping with butter. Then Ho, for the joys of the country in June where you can lock your chicken in the eye before you taste him and where simple elegance has no place on the menu. LUNCHEON ISHELD FOR WAR MOTHERS Indianapolis chapter of American War Mothers met for a covered dish luncheon Tuesday at the home of Mrs. G. D. Nichols, 1027 Oakland street. A business meeting followed. Guests were Mesdames Sarah B. Wilkinson, C. J. Sinclair, Lizzie Ream, Clara N. Anderson, Edna Weishner and Nola Stevenson. Mrs. Anna Gilbert was in charge of the program, which w T as a program of singing and toe dancing. The chapter will meet in the MeyerKiser assembly room July 15. MRS. ALLISON IS GUEST AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Ostrom entertained with a dinner Monday night at the Avalon Country Club in honor of Mrs. Myra J. Allison. Decorations and appointments were in patriotic colors. Guests included Dr. and Mrs. John F. Barnhill, Miami Beach, Fla., formerly of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Scoggins, Nashville, Tenn.; Miss Amy Jackson, Chicago: Dr. and Mrs. Frank F. Hutchins, Messrs, and Mesdames Clarence R. Weaver, Harold B. West, Felix M. McWhirter, L. Roy Zaps, Thomas P. Woodson, Harry O. Garman, Oscar M. Pittenger, Neal Grider, Albert J. Hueber, Misses Helen Garman, Bernadine Grow, Ethel Mary Ostrom, Messrs. Raymond D. Jackson, Harry O. Garman Jr. and Henry Ostrom Jr.

Chic One-Strap Formerly $6 Sketched From Stock BMtf White Kid, | 111 Sm | Beige, Sunburn, *|jjr Black Calf, j ~ Patent Leather All Sizes l J Chic enough to appear smart at any gala Fourth of July celebration. So cool and comfortable with its cunning vamp and side cutouts. This shoe so perfectly accents light summer dresses that you’ll want more than one pair at this extraordinary price. cMlhoU “Bur Shoes at a 18-20 East Shoe Sboi." CJWashington St.

Your Beauty Colors —No. 6-

Nancy Carroll Reveals Beauty in ‘Young' Colors

•‘Your Rriutr Colors” mar bo those of Nance Carroll. The following article Is the sixth in a series written for The Times and NEA Service. BY' NINON NEA Service Writer NATURE is a past-master of the psychology oi color. She makes a summer day a master - ! piece—flowers of a thousand delicate hues, sketched against all the nuances of green, with crystal blue skies above and bright sunshine touching all with its magic wand of ! gold. You can emulate Nature, you can become a master of the psychology of color in relation to yourself and thereby make of yourseii a masterpiece. Learn the varied distillations of color that give your contours cosmic grace, your skin inspiring transparencies, your features lightened and softened beauty. There are these colors. It is your task to discover them! Perchance you have an animated sprightliness and daintiness that suggests young willows, blowing in the spring brreezes. If so, this should be capitalized. Perhaps you are like Nancy Carroll, who is the essence of such a spirit. Her soft, curly hair is red. her eye., clear blue, Ijer face has a baby roundness and her complexion is fair. She is 5 feet 4 and weighs 116. Does that describe yea, too? If so, you should use natural powder, a medium lip stick, just a little mascara on your lashes, just a touch of eyebrow shading. Try the youngest colors in 'the world—spring green. Try blues, the clear blues of delphiniums, forget-me-nots, the browns of the boughs of trees, the

MISS BELL WEDDED TO FRANK HAROLD

Miss Constance Wilhelmina Bell, daughter of Mrs. W. E. Bell. Richmond, and Dr. Frank Harold, son of Mrs. Isaac Harold, 526 East Fall Creek boulevard, were united in marriage at the home of the bride’s mother Monday. The Rev. H. S. James, Delray, Fla., officiated. Following the ceremony a wedding breakfast was served at Seven Mile Tavern, Eaton, O. The couple will be at home in Richmond. Among the guests were the bridegroom’s mother and his sister, Miss Halcie Harold, both of Indianapolis. MRS. HAUGHER IS LUNCHEON GUEST Miss May Barr, 3460 North Pennsylvania street, was hostess today at luncheon and bridge in honor of Mrs. Harry Haugher, Los Angeles, who is visiting her mother, Mrs. J. D. Smith, 3201 Ruckle street. The luncheon table was decorated with summer, flowers. Covers were laid for the following guests: Mrs. Charles O. McCoimick, Mrs. Roy Rodabaugh. Mrs. Kathryne Clements, Mrs. Robert Buchannan, Mrs. Lauer Froelich, Mrs. J. Kent Leasure, Mrs. Hugh Knippenberg, Mrs. Carl Ittenbach, Mrs. Joseph Raub, and Miss Helen Smith. Arrange Installation Omega Chi sorority, Alpha chapter, will install Bets chapter tonight at the Lumley tearoom. New members will be Misses Gladys Bonewltz, Alice Carver, Kate Cobb, Dorothy Decker, Margaret Harris, Patsy Mitchell, Grace Pettit, Maxine Rawlings. Naomi Scott, Helen Taylor and Margaret Wilson. Club to Entertain Following a business meeting for new rushees at 7:30 tonight at the Chamber of Commerce building, members of the Danzarite Club will have a swimming party.

Nancy Carroll . . . sprightly.

orange tones in California poppies. Nancy wears all of these. She surrounds herself with green tones in her home and all of the colors she wears go well against such a background. Aside from the psychology of suiting colors to your own particular type of beauty, there is the point of selecting colors that themselves suggest youth, vivacity, demureness. Take a lesson from Nancy Carroll. Try her colors, try her makeup. Experiment. Know that your own colors do exist. Find them! How Dolores Del Rio chooses colors that heighten her exotic beauty will be told next. ALTRUSAN CHIEF IS GUEST IN CITY Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Austin, Tex., recently elect'd national president of the Altrusa Clubs, is the house guest of Mis. A. Otto Abel, 1321 North Beville avenue. Mrs. Gardner wall be honor guest and speaker at the regular weekly luncheon meeting of the club at the Columbia CluD Miss Hazel Williams, who was elected national vice-president at the same time as Mrs. Gardner; Miss Audrey Folckener, Miss Amanda Anderson and Miss Lois Anderson have returned from New York and Washington, where they drove following the national convention at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.

FJGAT O| M) L* Hf LUGGAGE SALE-38 W. WASHINGTON ST*

JULY AND THE HOUSEWIFE The mere mention of this month conjures up visions of heat—stifling heat —with its attendant loss of energy and the will “to do.” The eternal cycle of cleaning, washing and cooking takes on a rather formidable aspect at this time. The dust settles almost faster than one can manage. Dust and duster seem on a merry-go-round. Washing—so much more of it in the hot summer months —will ruin any woman’s day. Cooking, instead of a delight, becomes a hardship. But this need not be! There are electrical servants for almost every household task. They will lighten your labor. Do not throw away time and health on tasks that can be done for you for a few cents a day, the cost of your electric service. INDIANAPOLIS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY 48 DAYLIGHT CORNER MONUMENT MERIDIAN AND CIRCLE WASHINGTON STS.

JULY 2, 1930

Bride-Elect Is Honored at Shower Miss Jane Sutton and Miss Marjorie Groetcheus will entertain tonight with a green kitchen shower at Miss Sutton's home, 3943 Ruckle street, in honor of Miss Mary Elizabeth Glossbrenner, whose marriage to Merrill Borden McFall will take place July 9. Decorations will carry out Miss Clossbrenner’s pink and green color s heme. The table at serving time will be centered with sweet peas and lighted by tall pink and green tapers tied with contrasting bows of tulle. The hostess w ill be assisted by her mother, Mrs. A. F. Sutton. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother. Mrs. Herbert Glossbrenner, will be Miss Harriet Taylor, Miss Mildred McFall, Miss Wilma Mae Wolf. Miss Betty Holt, Miss Marjorie Mcßride, Miss Lois Sedam and Miss Dorothy Screes. Mrs. Robbins Is Honor Guest at Home Shower Mrs. Harry M. Miller. 1703 East Tabor street, entertained with a shower Tuesday night at her home in honor of Mrs. Roy Robbins. Decorations and appointments were carried out in pink and blue. Shower gifts were presented in an umbrella decorated with pink and blue. Guests included: Mesdames Albert Hulse Albert L. Hook Burns R. Maus Thomas Saldey J. Mitchell Fred Schoomever Albert Howe W. J. Madden Ira Hart Herschell Lvke Oscar Robbins Lester Gray Harry Robbins Marshall Cogle Floyd Kriner Robert Grace Warren Brinkley Cornelia Calvin Rudolph Pedigo R. W. Belch Paul Gray Henry E. Liesmann Graj:e Robison Mae Jewett Frank Neukom J. J. Good Ronald Dowles Charles Hulsa Frank C. Smallwood Charles Miller Charles Clark Elrov Heller Lillian Schoomeyer Harold Henderson Dorothy Vaughn Mary Myers S. M. Clegg Louis Klnard Harrv Ameter Walter Bailey Lucille Emly Arthur Miller Ada Long John Miller

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