Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 71, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1930 — Page 14
PAGE 14
SPEND Don't Rush Makeup; It's a Real Art BY NINON NEA *.r*ie Writer new YORK. Aug. I.—You can gauge a woman’s real self-respect this season by the amount of time she Is willing to spend on making herself beautiful. ~ You can't do a perfect ana subtle Job of improving on nature if you hurry it too much. And don't forget that your hair and your nails are an integral part of your grooming. For the last decade obvious makeup was chic. An agile lady could jost about dash on her lipstick and (puge and run a comb through her hair while running for a street car. Today, the age of leisurely elegance is upon us. that flatters, but is not obvious; is preferred. Roughing and using one's lipstick, and evebrow coloring, powder. becomes an art. There is no denying art takes time! A Half-Hour Task ‘ Spend at least thirty minutes on your face." is the advice of Luclen Lelong. Paris expert on feminine beauty and attire. ‘ Before starting for the day’s shopping or for the office and again before leaving for the evefting's entertainment, a half hour is little enough time for beautifying. t "As the first step in beauty, before you begin makeup select your rouge and lipstick with the greatest of care “I have seen women use Vermillion lipstick and orange rouge on their faces simultaneously, and nothing on earth could defeat a beautiful and natural look more effectively.. They should match exactly and of course bear some direct relation to one’s own tone of coloring.’’ The choice of powder's color is quite as important as rouge and lipstick. Those who have gone in for suntan should have a look at ochre and orange tints. Try Soft Ivory Tones Those who prefer pale beauty should not mar it with flesh pink powder, but try the soft ivory skin tones, those that add pallor to already pale cheeks. And the choice of makeup for the eyes is even more important than face powder. For the eyes are the focal points of beauty this autumn and should be treated most subtly and artistically. The old saying that beauty is more than skin deep is, of course, true. The actual health of an individual is what gives sparkle to the eyes and lilt to the carriage. But the care of the skin itself is of tremendous importance. Especially now. when the least obvious makeup is the chic one. the creaminess and tone of the skin is a first step to beauty. Emollient Creams Excellent Any one who has been out in the open this summer must try some of the fine emollient creams that are on the market now. They are excellent for that parched feeling your face may have. They are used after cleansing cream has thoroughly removed the dirt. They are soft and caressing and the face relaxes under their use. especially if they are warmed slightly to blood temperature. Oils for those tender portions around the eyes and the corners of the nose are other luxuries that women should make necessities. And after this*treatment, a good astringent closes the pores but leaves the akin soft. Last comes a brisk ice rub. either pieces of ice wrapped in a towel or one of the new contrivances that hold ice and can be used as a kind of iron on the face to strengthen any lagging muscles. Before the Makeup An eye tonic should be used next and the face patted dry before any makeup base is applied. Face powder. rouge, lipstick and eye makeup should all bear much the same relation in tone and compatibility that your skin and features do. Perfume play* a subtle game this season, too. The only obvious perfuming one does is the final touch to a makeup. That consists of a dash of your favorite perfume on the lobe of each ear and on your lips. Since your bath has been scented and your lingerie has its sachets folded in it, and you have used perfume spray while grooming, this is Just a suggestion, a last fine touch to a perfect operation. Hoosier Dies in West l.u Timr* Svecwl OAKTOWN, Ind., Aug. I.—Mrs. W. H. Bond of Oaktown' has received word of the death in Missoula. Mont., of her brother-in-law, James E. Cullop, a brother of the late William A. Cullop. former representative in congress from the Second Indiana district. this famous Fruit Punch Here , delightful refreshment lor Kar next card party Welch s famous it punch. The recipe or every label— wonderfully delicious blend! treat B the temflv wrfU w*Jctan —Welch fat the). bre.kfast fruit mice. 81a liberal portions to the Pin* more l * dilutes erttb 00.-third erater. ana many prefer***. Less then So e eortlool tn.i.- an Welch a. pare, unadulterated •rare edee. odarevrlaed J ¥m ejaaien *•***- #■£*— arm ***** Ow* A *' n 4 MtTiaawnm
30 MINUTES DAILY ON YOUR FACE FOR BEAUTY
SUBTLE TOUCHES WILL ACHIEVE CHARM
fir - , s)tV\ 4 # Am '
harm via the subtle-beauty route comes through careful grooming, in the new mode. Right: Be sure our lipstick perfectly matches your rouge, and don’t use too much of either. Left: Asa final touch of perfection, apply a drop of perfume to your lips and your ear lobes.
V""** Child - Childhood Diseases Are Not ‘Necessary’, as Many Think
BY OLIVE ROEERTS BARTON. “Browns have the whooping cough, or the measles, but I’m not going to try to keep Billy away because he has to have those children’s diseases some time and it may as well be now. The sooner the better.” Have you ever heard mothers say that? Now Billy doesn’t nepd to have those diseases, and such a statement from any mother shows a certain ignorance of the facts. It shows that she doesn’t know that every illness Billy has, seemingly serious or otherwise, takes away just a little bit more of his resistance, makes his organs less efficient, corrodes his nerves, and affects his general constitution to such an extent that the sum total of all his illness by the time he reaches manhood will spell his health capital and his life expectancy. Illnesses Leave Mark He may seem to recover completely from his long spells of high temperature, and various complications, but any one who argues that he is better for having had them, or that they are inevitable or inescapable is merely doing a bit of guesswork without any foundation whatsoever. The illnesses of childhood leave their mark. I have heard people say that after typhoid fever, for instance, which is now, as we know, fast disappearing. a certain person was fatter and better than ever. Yes, apparently, only to have, ten or twenty years later, a gallbladder infection that comes without any apparent cause, but which is really a direct aftermath of the intestinal infection of the old disease. However, that is not classed as a childhood disease. To go back to them—whooping cough, measles, mumps, and all the others even with the best of care they are likely to leave an invisible trail behind them. Isolate a Sick Child Parents should see that their children are kept.lrom not only other families infeoted with these thing?, but any other children in the immediate household who may be infected. A sick child should be kept in a room absolutely apart from the<
EARLY CEIC
- II
“nils smartly tailored pajama suit of rich brocaded silk will declare Miss Modish to be the modem that she is and will crystallize her fresh morning appearance. Soft gaeen is an excellent color that's easy on the eyes and it fits well into the veranda background where buffet breakfast is served. There,is a sleepless tuck-in blouse, fcousers that flatter the slender Mriine and flare to comfortable width, ami 4i coat of the new length.
others, and the other children kept away from it aslfar as possible—out of the house entirely if that can be managed. Parents owe a duty not only to their own children, but to the community. Other children should be protected. If a child has whooping cough or any other contagious disease and is well enough to be out-of-doors, he should not be allowed to roam over the streets or in other people’s yards or sit on steps with other children. Take Care of Child They say six weeks is the duration of contagion, but that has to be proved. I should give the child with whooping cough a wide berth for a longer period than that if my own children were menaced. The child with whooping cough should not be taken to movies, ever. Even one with a severe cold should not be allowed to mingle with other children. It may be only a cold for him, but the germ caught from him, incubating in a less healthy child may develop into an infection that is really serious.
PERSONALS
Each day sees the departure of vacationists for points north.' Mrs. Harry H. McNamee, 4507 North Pennsylvania street and her daughter, Miss Mary Ellen McNamee have left for Northport Point, Mich.* where they have a summer home. Mrs. Frank M. Reed and her daughter, Miss Frances Reed, 812 West drive, Woodruff Place, are spending the month at their home at Northport P*int. Dr. and Mrs. George S. Row, 5214 Grandview drive, will leave Sunday for their cottage at Harbor Springs, Mich. Harbor Springs is the center of activity foi a colony of Inidanapolis folk in northern Michigan. Dr. and Mrs. Karl Kayser and daughter, Miss Margaret Kayser, 3309 Park avenue, will leave Saturday for Lake George where they will spend the remainder of the summer. Mrs. Samuel A. Johnston and her daughter. Miss Dorothy Johnston, 2127 North Delaware street, are spending the rest of the summer at Rye Beach, N. H. Miss Bertha Jane Mueller, 4433 Broadway, will motor Sunday to Wequetonsing, Mich., with Mrs. D. O. Kearby and Miss France-. Kearby. 3920 Washington boulevard. Mrs. Gibson Adams and her daughter, Miss Martha Adams, 3417 Park avenue, will visit Mrs. Adams’ mother in Springfield, Mo., for several weeks. * Erwin A. Knecht, 2005 Ashland avenue, who has been visiting his parents in Europe for the past three months, will return next week to Indianapolis. Miss Coryenne Wicks, 111 East Forty-sou th street and Miss Mary Stark, 534 East Fifty-eighth street, will go Si . day to Lake Wawasee for a week's stay. Mr. and Mrs. James Day, Ch'cago, are visiting friends in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Orton, 4102 North Illinois street, and Mrs. M. W. Smith, 4725 Central avenue, are among the Indianapolis guests at Edgewater Beach hotel, Chicago.
CARD PARTIES
Division No. 10, L. A. A. O. H., will have a card party tonight’at St. Joseph’s hall, 613 East North street. Miss Mary Ziegler and Miss Miyme O’Conner are hostesses. i MISS LEWIS WEDS'_ HAROLD KOEHLER Marriage of Miss Gladys Lewis, ! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. 1 Lewis, Dayton, Ind., to Harold | Koehler, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. [Koehler. 907 North Hamilton avenue, took place at the home of the bride’s ! parents Thursday. The Rev. H. W. I Steen read the wedding service. Mr. ! Koehler was graduated from Purdue university, where he was a ; member of Alpha Gamma Rho frai temity. The couple will live in Indianapolis.
Ofa/rtAi/r tA SMART clothes on easy credit
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
# Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- _ - _ tern No. 7 17 Size Street City Name State
■3^ 3' 7IT
WEE MODERNS STEP OUT SMARTLY
Happy! Os course, in new comfy one-piece frock. All the fulness falls from the shoulders and round neckline. It is sleeveless. The shoulders are drooped just a tiny bit. They are finished whit arm bands that offer splendid opportunity for contrasting color. It is sketched in pale pink batiste, with trim in pink and white print. Style No. 717 especially will interest mother. It is so easily made. Practically a one-piece front and back to be joined at sides and shoulders. The neck is then gathered into neck band. Sleeve bands are stitched to armholes and it’s finished. Orchid and white gingham check with white pique, French blue cotand yellow linen with white linen with yellow dots are sturdy selections. 14 It comes in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Pattern price, 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferrred). Wrap coin carefully. W £ suggest that when you send for this pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional for a copy of our large Fashion Magazine.
MRS, J, W, HARVEY IS LUNCHEON HOSTESS
Mrs! J. W. Harvey entertained this afternoon at her home. 2646 College avenue, with a luncheonbridge party. The table was decorated with garden flowers. Covers were laid lor Mrs. Harvey, Mrs. August Siersdale, Mrs. H. W, Askine, Mrs. Salem Clarke, Mrs. A. C. Githens, Mrs. Harry Till, Mrs. Marie Heath and Mrs. W. J. Allen. The party was given in honor of Mrs. Till and Mrs. Githens, who will leave soon for a trip through the east.
Affection Necessary in Happiness BY MARTHA LEE When a wife is very young and even more sentimental than she is young, it is pretty hard to have to bear with a husband who is about as affectionate as a nettled bumble bee and about as demonstrative as the Sphinx. If all affectionate, demonstrative women could marry affectionate, demonstrative men, quite a few homes would be saved from the wreck of divorce and unhappiness. But things don’t happen that way. Men who fairly reek with sentiment marry girls who are too business like and cold blooded *ver to give it a second thought. * Girls whose life embers are kept glowing by the most romantic dreams of love and kisses all through married life marry men whose idea of real affection is an occasional peck on the cheek. Result Is Disastrous When this sort of a union is consummated, the result usually is disastrous for one or the other. If a man’s wife fails to give him the affection he wants, he will soon go some place else to get it. A wife whose husband falls short in the “affections display” department will mope around, feel abused and finally quit. She can stand him failing to make his way in the financial world. She can stand poverty and disgrace, but she can’t stand not having affection. When a woman marries, she does not expect to have all the little signs of affection and words of love left in a heap on the altar steps. She looks forward to them increasing in tenderness after the ceremony. A man does not expect his bride to relinquish all tenderness with her maiden name. It’s an old cry, but so many women write in about it that it must be a serious problem and a deterrent to real happiness. “I have been married five years,” writes one woman, “and my husband seems to have forgotten completely there are such things as kisses and kind words. He is a good man, provides for me and our two children, but that’s the end of it. “I have an affectionate nature. I like to have him affectionate in return. Instead of his ardor, increasing since we were married, it has cooled. He never tells me any more that he loves me, or shows me by little affectionate pats that he does. I am terribly unhappy because of this.” Sweet Teeth Ache The point is. when we want chocolate candy, when our sweet teeth fairly ache for chocolate candy, it’s pretty tough to have to eat boiled cabbage and let it go at that. Boiled cabbage is nourishing but after all it isn’t candy. \ Os course, cabbage has its good points. A lot more of them than candy has. A husband has good stable qualities, whose pay envelope finds its way each week into the lap of his wife, whose habits do not include drinking, gambling and carousing surely is superior as husband material to a husband who is romance itself when it comes to hugs and kisses, but awfully short on all the other .things. Candy has its place in the diet. Occasionally it is a nice thing. But after all life could be sustained without it. Undemonstrative men and women are apt to love more deeply than those men and women who spend the greater share of their time whispering sweet nothings and pursing pretty lips. A wife or husband who craves a demonstrative mate and hasn’t one would do well to study the subtle little demonstrations that are unfailing signs of love and devotion.
SHOWER GIVEN FOR MISS ROSE CAPLIN
Mrs. Leo Selig, Miss Ethel Sandler and Miss Pearl Bryan entertained with a linen shower and bridge party Thursday night at the Lumley tearoom in honor of Miss Rose Caplin, whose marriage to Harry Zukerburg will take place Aug. 10 in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel. At serving time, the table was decorated with plateaus of sweetpeas in the Dresden shades and lighted with tapers tp match. The place cards, minature bridesmaids, were arranged in the form of a garden wedding party. Gifts were presented to the bride-elect in an umbrella decorated in the Dresden shades. Thirty-six guests attended.
PERMANENTS ■mM None More Beautiful Hot weather will not ruffle our P ermanent wave. You ML YHi F* A r-: '■ will find them always lovely Jk w M ■ ‘ ‘ alwa^s curly, the kind _ HMIaRB smart women prefer. Why ■HS pay more? WM Hi We also give make tour appointments now French dr Artistic Permanent Wave System waves.. 207 Odd Fellow Bldg. Lincoln 0874 BE BEAUTIFUL
Octagon Shaped Glasses Firapr Tnrir Lenses, Finest Qu.'ilirv White G ri !dFiller) Mmmti,.? EXAMINATION. LENSES AND FRAME COMPLETE. *6.50 to *8.50 Evening and Sunday Examinations by Appointment. Riley 8421 1 DR. J. E. KERNEL Optical Dept.—Main Floor Balcony . JVm, H. BLOCK GO,
ARRANGES LUNCHEON
' -, -vS-r :<:"&
Miss Claudia Taylor is a member of the committta in char ™ of the Chi Omega state luncheon to be held gt 12:30 Saturday at the Columbia < Club. More than seventy-five members of the two chapters at Indiana and Purdue universities and alumnae will attend.
SPORT GARB
Suitable for either tennis or golf is this utterly feminine sleeveless white outfit. It’s of silk broadcloth, made with intricate bandings and a really full skirt, with some of the season’s matching shorts under it. Miss Modish may wear this peanut Panama hat, with any colored banding, and she will walk in style with brown and white, black and white or all white sports shoes. _ - . . Then, the game over, the weekend finished, Miss Modish will have the pleasure of knowing that she was the best-dressed guest!
DRESS MAKING Alteration work of all kinds on women’s garments. The Thimble Shoppe 419 When Bids. 31 North Pennsylvania Street
ROBERTSON'S PERFECT PERMANENTS Nestle Circuline $5.00 Wave Rite 12.50 Formerly of RnelbyviUe, Indiana 2157 N. His. St. TA. 5003
R'jnt a Plano Term* as Low as SI.OO A WEEK Pearson Piano Cos. 128-130 N. Pennsylvania
CHICAGO WOMAN IS GUEST AT BRIDGE Mrs. Clyde F. McLean, 4111 Arthington boulevard, entertained Thursday with a bridge party in honor of her sister, Mrs. H. W. Ayer, Chicago. Guests were Mrs. W. F. Strong, Mrs. H. F. Fahler, Mrs. R. F. Adams, Mrs. V. L Dale, Mrs. T. R. Booth and Mrs. L. J. Wilson. Dance to Be Given There will be dances in Haddon hall, McCordsville, at 8:30 Saturday and Sunday nights. Musical programs will be played by the Pacemakers under the direction of Homer Du pee.
Great Final 4 cl Cl,o£ Starts Tomorrow! Ip °,v Jmßßfr 1 $6.85 ! j Values j This Is Absolutely Our Final Clearance and Includes All of Our Summer Footwear, Regardless of Price MorrisonS fcTJB FOUNDED 1804 ***** 26 West Washington St.
43 SOUTH ILLINOIS ST. v Between WaAkjtow end Maryland Streets
AUG. I, 1930
Honor PaidCity Author at Party Mrs. Carter Jackson and her house guest, Mrs. Dallas Pickett, Spencer, were honor guests at a bridge party Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Albert. B. Forlor, 3340 North Meridian street. Mrs. Jackson, who writes under the name of Margaret Weymouth Jackson, recently moved to Indianapolis with Mr. Jackson and her three children, Ann, Martha and Charles, from Spencer. The Jacksons’ home is at 5702 Pleasant Run parkway. - • Guests with Mrs. Jackson and Mrs. Pickett were Mrs. Charles E. Rush, Mrs. Harold Koch, Mrs. Ivan Smith. Miss Ann Weymouth, Miss Margaret Roberts. Miss Ethel Zwartz and Miss Mary Margaret Newton. TEXAS VISITOR IS GUEST AT BRIDGE Mrs. Dillon B. Ray, 5353 College avenue, entertained Thursday with luncheon and bridge in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Harrell V. Bailey, Houston, Tex., who with her little son, David Walace Bailey, will spend the month of August with her parents. Guests included a group of Mrs. Bailey’s former school friends, who were Mrs. William Ervin, Mrs. Damon Goode. Mrs. Mersjjl Miller, Mrs. Frank Kern, Mrs. Robert Tatman, Mrs. Burton Tyson, Mrs. Allan Harcourt, Mrs. Burton Yarian, Mrs. Francis Binton, Mrs. Mark Rhoads,. Mrs. Oral Bridgeford and Mrs. Donald Hoover. Heaton-Ellis Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Marie Ellis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ellis, Clarks Hill, to Glenn Heaton, Thorntown, which took place July 17 at Albuquerque, N. M. Mrs. Heaton was graduated from Indiana university and has been attending the University of Arizona at Tucson. Mr. Heaton also attended Indiana university.
