Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 79, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1930 — Page 6
PAGE 6
CHOOSE YOUR HATS WITH CARE IF YOU WEAR
Crystal and Earrings to Be Avoided T BY JULIA BLANSHARD XEA ferric* Writer NEW YORK. Aug. 11.—Glasses Heed not be an unsurmountable hindrance to beauty. Accept them at their lace value, and ptete your hats, necklines. Jewels and other ornaments with direct relation to them. By experimenting with this type of hat or that, you will learn Just what is mo6t becoming and what is distinctly out, so long as you wear glasses. First, the lens must be perfect for your vision. This is a matter of professional fitting. Second, select the frames as carefully as you would a pair of earrings, a necklace or any other accessory, with a view to their flattering you. Third, never buy a hat or jewels without considering them with relation to your glasses. Rim Shade Important So far as frames are concerned, shell long has been prominent for eye glasses because of its durability and its comfort in hot weather. But choose the right shade. A consensus of stylists determined that an amber shade, modeled to blend with flesh tones, is becoming to the average person. For general style directions, the following set of rules has been worked out: For dress, wear rimless glasses and oxfords; for business. rimless spectacles and eye glasses, spectacles and eye glasses with metal and shell combination, or light weight metal rim spectacles or shell ones: for sports, a substantial frame spectacle, metal, combination or shell: for study, reading or close handwork of any kind, comfortable, light weight spectacles in shell or metal; for street wear, shopping, the theater or wear with evening clothes, oxfords or lorgnettes. Children should have frames of rigid construction, either shell or metal. The newest glasses have the pink gold, rather than the white gold, because it tones in with the skin. Oxford Type Attractive A convenient new oxford type has a shell frame with a pink gold bridge across the nose which leaves no impression whatsoever upon the nose, being held in place by two short, straight temple pieces that extend only to the ears, not over them. This oxford folds up like lorgnettes, and can be worn or carried easily. For evening, lorgnettes and nose glasses are growing intricate and lovely. At a recent wedding the bride's mother wore a pair of eyeglasses with the nose piece and frames of engraved platinum, set in diamonds and sapphires to match her silver-gray hair and blue eyes and making an ensemble of her sapphire necklace and ring and glasses. This autumn's hats apparently had in mind the woman who wears glasses. The long sides, draped styles and off-the-forehcad mode fit well with the lines and contours of glasses. Avoid Small Hat But, watch out for the extremely rmall hat, the too-tight turban, and the beret on the back of the head —they all accent glasses unbecomingly. A close fitting mushroom, also, should be shunned, because it casts a shadow over the glasses. Avery wide-brimmed hat, worn pulled down, makes the eyes and glasses lose their proportions in an amazing manner and therefore is bad. But for soft grace and beauty, the draped, fabric hats, those with the new double brims, made of transparent or silk velvet, are tremendously successful and flattering. Be careful of hat ornaments. If made of gleaming rhinestone or crystal and worn near the face, you get a double reflection from your glasses, which utterly ruins your personality. Jewels Are Important The jewels you wear with your glasses are very important, too. Avoid earrings: your glasses conflict with most of them and you lose distinction. The long, pendant kind are best. If you yearn for them. Heavy, long, necklaces and those with many strands usually are not so effective as simple ones. Never wear crystal or other clear glitter, if you can help it. If you can't keep from buying it, have it of the frosted variety. The plain crystal necklace is worse than hat ornaments for double reflections. Amber and plastic composition and all the colored translucent jewelry is available. You must try It to know which is good and which is not. HOLLYWOOD COUPLE LUNCHEON GUESTS Mrs. Mary E. Bucher and her daughter.- Miss Bertha Bucher of Hollywood, were guests of honor at a luncheon given Friday by Mrs. Ralph D. Udell. 2327 North Talbott avenue. Guests were Mcsdames Alice Cosier, Lena Watts. Clara Crist. Ella Hazelrigg. Elizabeth Landers, B. Frank Hollingsworth, Joseph L. Hogue, Hugh Essex, Robert Irwin. Howard Ackerman and Madison Davis. W. B. .4. Picnic Slated Members of Francis Review No. 8, W. B. A., will have a picnic Tuesday at Camp Harding. Mrs. George Phillips will be hostess. Mrs. Dora Henry to chairman in charge. u
HEADGEAR AIDS SPECTACLES
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Hats and Jewelry from Bonwlt Teller. N. Y. You can make your glasses flatter you if you. select them, your hats and jewels with due respect to each other and yourself. Left—For lunch or the theater, the new amber Oxford glasses, with pink gold bridge and short temple pieces, are excellent when worn with a softly draped double brim velvet hat and a necklace of Russian lapis carved in a rose design and joined with gold links. Right—Making a chic sports ensemble for fall are a dark brown felt hat with inset of beige, shell spectacles of brown and amber tones and amber beads of even, round cut.
Delegates to Session Are Chosen Units of the American Legion Auxiliary of Indianapolis have elected delegates to attend the annual state convention to be held Aug. 23 to 26 at Ft. Wayne, in connection with the state legion convention. Mrs. Ruth Ridgeway, president and Mrs. Vivian Hague, secretary of the Hayward Barcus unit, will be delegates, with Mrs. Lucille Weimar and Mrs. Ralph Klare as alternates. Bruce P. Robinson will be represented by Mrs. Ruth Thomas and Mrs. Hazel Boyle. Their alternates will be Mrs. Mary Louise Ragsdale and Mrs. Hazel Maxwell. Carl Switzer and Mrs. Paul Meisenhelder will be delegates for John Holliday unit. Alternates will be Mrs. O. E. Hesslar and Mrs. Gladys Hawkins. Mrs. Blanche Breedlove, president of Memorial unit, and Mrs. George Healey will be delegates of that unit, with Mrs. Irma Smith and Miss Lena Nester as alternates. Madden-Nottingham unit will be represented by Mrs. Helen Foster, president, and Mrs. Lucille Robinette. treasurer. Osric Mills Watkins unit will be represented by Mrs. Clarence Meyers. Auxiliary headquarters during the convention will be the Keenan hotel.
Bride-Elect, Fiance Will Be Honored Dr. and Mrs. Fletcher Hodges will entertain tonight at Woodstock Club with a bridal dinner in honor of their daughter, Miss Anne Chamberlain Hodges, and her fiance, Jesse James Garrison, Madison, Wis., who will be married Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 at Christ church. Covers will be laid for Dr- and Mrs. Hodges. Miss Hodges, Mr. Garrison, Miss Charlotte Garrison, Chicago; Miss Vickery Hubbard. Boston; Miss Dorothy Ann Rucker, Miss Sara Margaret Moore, Miss Barbara Brandon. Miss Ruth Clifford Hodges, Jack Virtue, William Card. Lincoln, Neb.; Fletcher Hodges Jr., Bradford H. Hodges, and Francis T. Hodges. Miss Moore entertained with a buffet supper at the Woodstock in honor of Miss Hodges and Mr. Garrison. Sunday night. Mrs. . latthews Fletcher entertained the bride-elect at luncheon today at the Propylaeum. Her guests included Dr. and Mrs. Hodges, Mr -Garrison and members of the wedding party.
Second Party in Series at I. A. C. Slated
The Indianapolis Athletic Club has been staging special parties this summer for members and guests. The second of a series of swimming parties and buffet suppers will be held at 7:30 Thursday night. Members. their wives and guests will be entertained. Russ Holler and his orchestra will provide music. Hal Benham, Frank Fehsenfeld and Richard Papenguth, athletic director at the club, will give an exhibiion of diving and present an original skit. Wicker tables and chairs, under beach umbrellas, will be arranged at the side of the pool. Supper will be served at 3:30.
BRIDGE PARTY GIVEN BY MISS RINEHART
Miss Dorothy Rinehart, 320 Graham avenue, entertained with a bridge party Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Dorothea Vamtz of Lebanon and her guest. Miss Ernestine Wellton of Norfolk, Va. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. H. H. Rinehart and Miss Katherine Rinehart. Guests were Mesdames Everett C. Brown, Lebanon; Joseph C. Matthews, Francis Insley, H. C. Wurster. E. E. Martin, Clifford Hoffman, Alberta Berry hill; Misses Juanita Vamtz, Lebanon; Constance Forsythe. Katharine Belzer. Eleanor Hester and Jane Koyl. Entertains Members Mrs J. A. Mahoney, 4526 East Washington street. entertained members of the Olde flyme Friendship Cl use with a luncheon at 1 today.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- 7O A tern No. i £ ** Size Street City Name State
PAJAMAS FOR LOUNGING OR SLEEPING The slip-on hip length jumper blouse has piquant puff sleeves with novel-bow trim. The collarless round neckline is youthfully becoming. The trousers are snugly fitted through the hips with pin-tucks, giving the appearnace of a -yoke. They are comfortably full with flare toward ankle. As sketched in French blue polkadotted crepe de chine, they may be worn for sleeping or lounging. Style No. 724 can be had in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. They are enticingly smart and cool fashioned of printed batiste in daffodil yellow and nile green coloring. Pattern price, 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for this pattern, you inclose 10 cents additional for a copy of our large Fashion Magazine.
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Robinson, Des Moines. la., who have been the guests of their daughter, Mrs. J. L. Forcum and Mr. Forcum, 2119 Roosevelt avenue, have returned to their home. John Byram, New York, who is visiting In Indianapolis, will leave this week for a visit in Columbus, 0., wtih the Addison Millers before returning east. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Dewald and Joan Dewald, 3037 Boulevard place, will spend the week at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Dynes Floyd and her son, Dynes Floyd, Hampton court, have returned from a month’s stay at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. D. M. Laing, 3532 Washington boulevard, and her daughter. Miss Katherine and Miss Elizabeth Laing, are at the Greenbrier hotel, White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Avant, 1308 Central avenue, are at the Hotel Traymore, Atlantic City. Miss Mary Risk, 2412 Brookside parkway, will entertain tonight with a formal dinner in honor of her house guests, Miss Budelia Ellis and Miss Florence Kirrup, Grand Rapids, Mich., and Miss Olga Fidel, Waco, Tex. Miss Mary Beth Shields, 525 East Forty-ninth street, left today for a visit in Shelbyville. Mrs. W. B. Gates and her chil- I dren. 5263 Pleasant Run parkway, are visiting Mrs. Gates’ parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Bockstahler, at their cottage on Lake Maxinkuckee. Mrs. Dwight S. Ritter, 4415 Broadway, will entertain Tuesday with a luncheon at Avalon Country Club in honor of her niece, Miss Eileen O’Daniel, Bronxville, N. Y., who is her house guest. William McGaughey, Woodruff Place and Robert Babcock, 572 Jefferson avenue, left today for a few days' visit in Chicago. Thomas O'Connor, 1423 North Pennsylvania street, has returned from South Bend, where he attended Notre Dame university summer seacion. All-Day Meeting Set Members of Hamilton-Berry chapter. Service Star Legion, will be entertained with an all-day meeting on Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Bruce W. Maxwell, Millersville road. Luncheon will be served at noon, followed by a musical program at 2:30. Scssioti Is Scheduled Members of Phi Gamma Chi sorority will meet Tuesday night at the home of Miss Orpha Lang, 338 North Bosart avenue. Sorority to Meet Miss Evelyn Wysong, 217 West , Thirty-fifth street, will be hostess jfor a meeting ok, Theta Chi Omega 1 sorority lit hex hoffle tonight.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Miss Rauh Will Wed F. W. Prinz
The Country Club of Indianapolis will be the scene of a lovely wedding at 4:30 this afternoon, when Miss Eleanor Raub, daughter of the Edward Benjamin Raubs, 60 West Forty-third street, will become the bride of Franklin Ward Prinz, Oak Park, 111., son of Rudolph E. Prinz, Manitowoc, Wis. The Rev. J. Lewis Brown will read the service, which will take place before the fireplace in the main lounge of the clubhouse. The mantel will be banked with palms and ferns, with seven branch candlebrae on both sides. Edward Benjamin Raub Jr., Lafayette, brother of the bride, will be best man. Ushers will be Aubert Moritz, Kenilworth, 111.; Newell Munson, Prairie du Chein, Wis.; Reginald W. Garstang, William W. Garstang and J. Perry Meek. They will wear gardenia butonnieres. Mrs. Raub Jr., who will be matron of honor, will wear a pale pink point d’esprit gown, made with a fitted bodice. The skirt will have have three tiers, set diagonally. The waistline in the back will be marked with a bow of blue satin, with streamers to the floor. To Carry Rose Hill Roses She will wear pink satin slippers and a pink liairbraid hat, turned off the face, trimmed with blue velvet ribbon. She will carry an arm bouquet of Rose Hill roses and gypsophila painted blue tied with a pink maline bow and a shower of narrow blue satin ribbons. Miss Mary Jane Mortensen, Milwaukee, will be maid of honor. She will wear yellow point de'esprit, bodice, puff sleeves and long skirt, with six ruffles. A belt of the same material will have a Chanel buckle. Her picture hat of .yellow hairbraid will be trimmed with deeper yellow velvet. Her slippers will be deeper yellow to correspond to the bow on her gown. She will carry an arm bouquet of American Beauty roses tied with a yellow maline bow and a shower of American Beauty satin ribbons. The bridesmaids, Mrs lames Riely, New Albany; Miss Elsie Anderson, Evanston, 111., and Miss Katherine Armstrong, Shelbyville, Ky., will wear gowns made similar to Miss Mortensen. Mrs. Riely will wear green and carry an arm bouquet of Commonwealth roses tied with a green maline bow. Miss Anderson will wear blue and carry Rapture roses, tied with a blue maline bow. Miss Armstrong’s gown will be orchid and she will carry Claudius Pernet roses tied with an orchid maline bow.
Marilyn Raub Flower Girl All the attendants will wear crystal and pearl necklaces, the gift of the bride. Little Marilyn Raub, daughter of Edward Raub Jj\, will be flower girl. She will wear a ruffled organdie frock of pink and carry a French basket of rose petals with a shower bow of the bridal colors. Joseph Raub Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Raub, will be ring bearer. He will wear a white satin suit and carry the ring in a lily, tied with a shower bow of bridal colors. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear a Callot gown of white bridal satin, made princess style, with a fitted bodice and long flared skirt. The V insets in the bodice will meet the insets in the- skirt, at the waistline. The long tight sleeves have points over the hands. The peplum across, the back extends into a full court train. Her tulle veil has a cap of real lace, embroidered with seed pearls with clusters of orange blossoms and gardenias on both sides. She will wear a twisted seed pearl necklace and a diamond ring, with clusters of diamonds on either side. The ring, which Mr. Prinz’s mother's engagement ring, was his gift to the bride. She will carry a shower bouquet of Bride’s roses, lilies of the valley and orchids, tied with bridal maline ribbon and silver shower. Reception to Be Held Following the ceremony a reception will be held. Mrs. Raub will wear a pastel flowered chiffon gown, beaded at the neckline with pastel beads. She will wear a silver hairbraid hat trimmed with pink velvet and pink shell flowers. She hlso will wear a shoulder corsage of orchids and lilies of the valley. The bridal table will be centered with a three-tiered cake on a plateau of pastel-colored garden flowers which will extend the length of the table. The couple will go on a motor trip to northern Wisconsin, the bride traveling in a royal blue silk crepe suit with eggshell satin blouse embroidered heavily with pastel petit point. She will wear a blue transparent velvet hat, blue moire slippers and carry a silver fox scarf and blue petit point purse. She will wear a corsage of orchids. They will be at home after Sept. 1 at 1045 Pleasant street, Oak Park. The bride was graduated from Tudor hall. She attended De Pauw university, Ogontz School for Girls and was graduated from the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Prinz was graduated from Wisconsin where he was president of the Haresfoot Club and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Anmong the cut-oF town guests will be Mr- and Mrs. Arthur C. HamI mond, Wilmette, 111.; Mrs. Howard Hammond. Los Angeles; Roy Andree. Robert Callson, Oak Park; Harold Gardiner, River Forest and Joseph Reynolds, Chicago.
MRS, DEXHEIMER IS LUNCHEON GUEST
Mrs. W. R. McGeehan entertained Saturday with a luncheon at the Marottin honor of her house guest, Mrs. VA R. Dexlieimer, Ft. Wajnc. Guests included Mrs. R. H. Losey, Mrs. M. H. Graves, Mrs. Harry Webber, Mrs. John Bulger, Mrs. C. W. Marbucher, Mrs. Vern Graiter, Mrs- Harry Rogers, Miss Ora Webber. Miss jEtuby Little and Mrs. R. E. Mclntyre, Washington, D. C. Slate Regular Meeting Members of the Children's Sun- ; shine Club of Sunnyside will hold I their regular meeting at 2 Wednes- ' day in the ladies’ parlor of the Ftetchsr A merinert hsmjr,
Decided Scotch Tinge Is Displayed in Paris Showing of Togs for Sport
Following is the first of 2 series of dispatches to The Times. Sprveylo* the winter fashion showings In Ports shoos. BY JOHN WHITE United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, Aug. 11.—Any girl with a bit of Scotch blood in her veins would have been delighted with Jane Regny’s winter collection of sport clothes. Douglas, MacQucen, MacLeod, MacPherson, and Ogilvie were the clans chosen for these stuffs. Ogilvie was especially effective, being an ensemble with dress of oxford blue, cut simply, and trimmed with the Scottish plaid crepe for collar with long ties in back. The coat was lined with the red and yellow plaid.
INTERPRETS jT' vy> MC “
PARIS, Aug. 11. WELL, darlings, the world do move! Just listen to this beauty formula from olden times: “A water to preserve the complexion should be made of minced white pigeons, with sugar candy, camphor, eight or nine kinds of flowers and vegetables, to be kept for eighteen or twenty days and then distilled.” This concoction was to be used with a cleanser “made from raw bread and raw eggs.” And the consistent use of these two remedies,
Party to Be in Honor of Bride-Elect Miss Mai'garet Haldy. 4071 Broadway, will entertain with a pantry shower and bridge party tonight at her home in honor of Miss Edythe Hubbard, whose marriage to William H. Walker will take place Saturday afternoon. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Edward Haldy. Decorations and appointments will be in the bridal shades, pink and blue. The house will be decorated with garden flowers and at serving time the tables wall be lighted with pink and blue tapers. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. John S. Hubbard, will be Mrs. Paul Morton, Lebanon; Mrs. Karl Stout, Mrs. Marvin Lugar. Mrs. Herbert Todd, Mrs. Ronald Schmedel, Mrs. Harold Magee. Mrs. Charles Harrison, Miss Maud Ann Searcy, Miss Frances Walters and Miss Jean Richardson. Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Harrison, 5119 Broadway, and Mr. and Mrs. Don Farr, Decatur, entertained with a bridge party Saturday night at the Harrison home in honor of Miss Hubbard and Mr. Walker. The house was decorated with garden flowers. At serving time the tables were lighted with pink and blue tapers. Guests with the honor guests were Messrs, and Mesdames Morton, Lebanon; Fred Hodge, Frankfort; Magee, Lugar; Misses Searcy, Dorothy Beightol, Wollery, Haldy, Floyd King, Albert Lucas, Columbus, 0., and Robert I. Boyer.
City Girl to Be Bride of Naval Officer Announcement is made of the engagement of Miss Ann Timberlake, daughter of Mrs. Stanley M. Timberlake, 2035 North Meridian street, to Lietenant Douglas Pollock Johnson, U. S. N., son of Mr. and Mrs. William Cleveland Johnson, Cincinnati. Tire wedding will take place at Coronado Beach, Cal., Sept. 20. Mrs. Timberlake and her daughter are spending the summer there. The bride-elect, who is a member of Indianapolis Junior League, attended Tudor Hall school for girls and Miss Stout’s European Travel school. Lieutenant Johnson was graduated from Annapolis and is stationed on the U. S. S. Saratoga, now at San Diego.
MISS MARY GARRITY LUNCHEON GUEST
Mrs. J. V. Stout, 3364 Park avenue, entertained with a luncheon and swimming party at the Highland Golf and Country Club this afternoon in honor of Miss Mary Garrity, Chicago, who is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Gordon Kelly, 1 East Thirty-sixth street. The luncheon table was centered with a mound of garden flowers. Covers were laid for Mrs. Stout, Miss Garrity, Mrs. Kelly, Mrs. Leon Desautels, Mrs. William J. Mooney Jr., Mrs. William Francis Fox Jr., Miss Inez Taylor, Pasadena, Cal.; Miss Ann Carroll, Miss Eileen O'Connor and Miss Rosemary Clune. Elect New Officers Miss Patricia Hague was el acted president of Theta Beta Delta sorority at a meeting Friday at the home of Miss Violet Binder. Other officers are: Secretary, Miss Margaret Goslin; corresponding secretary, Miss Eleanor Eldridge, and treasurer, Miss Rosemary Keogh. Elect New Head Riley Rominger was elec' ' ~resident of the association of former residents of Bartholomew - l v , Sunday at the annual reunion and picnic at Garfield park. Mrs. Rilla Martin was elected secretary- The residents will meet the second Sunday in August, 1931. Entertains for Mother M'.'-t Helen Gehring. 607 * dison I avenue, entertained Saturday night j with a party in honor of her mother, ! Mrs. Cora Gehring. who left Sunday for a visit with her sister. Mrs. Fred Rabb, Los Angeles. Among the j guests were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph • Gehring and Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Getrue, Columbus, O,
All these sports dresses and coats used the plaids for a little bit of trimming on the dress, and for full lining of the coat. They were short, reaching the calf, and should be popular on British golf courses. Regny Introduced a number of new colors: New Blue, oxford blue, and nausicaa being outstanding. New blue is a nice “off-color” of what used to be known as delft, and seemed to be mixed with green and gray. Oxford blue might have been a dulled-down royal blue, and Nausicaa was a very dark mahogany brown, almost black. In a season of many bright reds and greens, these colors were a distinct comfort to women of cos-
'it was promised, would preserve the freshness of the skin and prevent wrinkles. Pretty smelly, eh wot! Oh, well, we have progressed a bit, haven’t we? Most of us know that an intelligent diet, sufficient exercise, and the application of simple rules for caring for the skin will make and keep any woman good to look upon! # tt tt WOMEN are lovely! Women are beautiful! Women are gracious, charming, kindly, peaceful! Oh, gosh-gol, by Jove-a-mejitis aren’t lovely ladies marvelous? Pardon me if I wax rhapsodic on this subject ever now and then. I assure you it isn’t entirely professional either. There just is something wrong with any man or woman who is not prepared to admit that a lovely woman is the most wonderful thing on earth. tt tt it Don’t you want to make the most beautiful nightgown yob ever saw? And an adorable negligee to wear with? Sh h-h-h , Alana’s coat cost her §l5O to have it all made by hand in Paris, and yours can cost you at least five times less if you sit down right this minute and send a 2-cent stamp to the Dare department of The Times for the illustrated leaflet that will tell you how to make it. Better send for it, because Christmas is going to sneak up on you, as it always does, and this will make a most gorgeous present! tt tt tt THE blouse was made of a white satin handkerchief! The jacket and skirt combined dark gray jersey and pale gray wool! And the three-quarter coat for cooler days was simply the last word. You couldn't blame me for getting all excited about it, now could you? Especially when the excitement led to my sketching it for you, as I did today. Schiaparelli knows how, I’ll certainly tell you that. it it tt Au Revoir! (Copyright. 1930. bv The Associated Newspapers. 1
W. C. T. U. NEWS
Frances Cleveland W. C. T. U. meeting will be held Wednesday afternoon at Center Methodist Episcopal church, on Bluff road. Mrs. W. W. Reedy, president of Central union, and Mrs. W. P. Knode will speak. Mrs. Ella Armstrong will have charge of devotions. A program of special music has been arranged and reports of local directors will be given. Mrs. Etta McLain will preside. Sarah A. Swain W. C. T. U. will be guests of Mrs. Eva Johnson, 819 Sanders street, Tuesday afternoon at 2, Assistant hostesses are Mrs. Loella Nagel and Mrs. Elizabeth Gwin. The Rev. William Lee Spratt of Victory Memorial Methodist Episcopal church will lead devotions. Election of officers will be held. Mrs. Nagel, vice-president, will preside. Frances Willard W. C. T. U. will hold its annual picnic in Riverside park Tuesday. Business session will open at 10:30. A covered dish luncheon will be served. Mrs. Orpha Sheets will preside. Mary Balch W. C. T. U. will meet Friday at 1:30 in the parlors of the Fletcher American bank. Mrs. W. S. Orvis will lead devotions. Election of officers will be held and reports of department directors will be given. A full attendance of members is desired. Mrs. Mary Hensley will preside. University Heights W. C. T. U. will entertain the Loyal Temperance Legion Tuesday at the regular monthly meeting in the college gymnasium. Mrs. W. B. Patton will have charge of devotions. An interesting program has been arranged. Mrs. Silas Ryker will preside.
Zerelda Wallace W. C. T. U. will i meet Tuesday at 10 at the home ; of Mrs. Mary Flick of Lawrence for | the annual picnic. Tire morning ; devotions will be led by Mrs. Fannie ; Bailiff. A short business session I will be conducted by the president, j Mrs. Henrietta Heishman. A bas- j ket luncheon will be served at noon. In the afternoon a social and recreational program will be given. Mrs. F. O. Masters will be chairman of the program committee. Nina Brigham W. C. T. U. will hold its regular meeting at Spades park Tuesday at 4. A covered dish dinner will be served at 6. Mrs. Julia Woodard will have charge of devotions. Mrs. Lillian Heizer will be the speaker. Mrs. Addie Lancaster will have charge of the program and preside. Broad Ripple W. C. T. U. will meet at the home of Mrs. Samantha Medsker, 6115 Broadway. Wednesday at 10 for an all-day j meeting. A covered dish luncheon will be served at noon. Election of officers will be held. The Rev. James Tilsley, pastor of the Broad Ripple Christian church, will be the speaker. Mrs. Nellie Young will lead the devotions. A Loyal Temperance Legion demonstration will be presented. Meeting Is Scheduled Weekly meeting of Theta Rho Sigma sorority will.,be held at the SDink-Arms tonight.
mopolitan taste who find it “gauche” to be attired too obviously. There were any number of plumcolored or wine-colored dresses, too —some even in tweed-jersey day things. One especially good model of the latter category was “Chateauneuf,” a pinkish-cast, plumcolored, tweed-jersey dress of tiniest plaid design, trimmed with a dustypink georgette collar, and covered by a big tweed coat in deeper version of the plum. Though the sports things undoubtedly were outstanding here, they did not eclipse some charming formal afternoon and evening clothes. An attractive sleeves for afternoon dresses had a crushed effect at the elbow, like gloves that had wrinkled down. “Saphir” fashioned from blue flat crepe verging upon the corinthe color Illustrated this designIt was extremely wearable, being tailored almost like a street dress, buttoning from one sid,e of the neck halfway down the blouse in the only indication of trimming shown. Many gowns were cut from the new gauze-thin chiffon which has a design like water-marking in the tissue. And there were a number of cream-colored, almost fleshcolored, satins for evening gowns. There were velvets, too, and these often were cut with a very deep split in front, as in an evening dress called “!e roi lear,” which in addition to the split skirt, had a near-empire bodice.
Miss Duhin Wedded at Synagogue Marriage of Miss Sara Dubin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max Dubin, 1125 Union street, to Morris Kaseff, son of Mrs. Fanny Kaseff, 1101 Maple street, took place at 5 Sunday evening at Shara Teffila synagogue. Rabbi Samuel A. Katz performed the ceremony before members of the immediate families and a few close friends. The bride’s sister, Miss Ann Dubin, was her only attendant. She wore pink taffeta and tulle and carried a bouquet of pink roses. Lbuis Kaseff, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore white chiffon made princess style. Her tulle veil was arranged cap shape with clusters of orange blossoms. She carried a shower of white roses. A dinner for members of the immediate families followed, at the home of the bride’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Kaseff have gone north, the bride traveling in a rose crepe ensemble. They will be at home after Aug. 25, at 1406 Union street. Among the out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. H. Sagel and daughter, Cincinnati; Mr. and Mrs. S. Solotkin, Greenfield, and Mr. and Mrs. H. Bohard, Greencastle.
MISS EWING WEDDED AT OHIO CAPITAL
Mrs. James E. Ewing announces the marriage of her daughter Miss Louise Fleming Ewing, to David A. Batchelor, son of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Batchelor. The wedding took place Saturday afternoon at Columbus, O. The bride attended Cornell and New York universities. She is a graduate of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, and is a Kappa Kappa Kappa. Mr. Batchelor attended Purdue university and is a member of Sigma Chi. They will be at home Sept. 1 in Indianapolis. Marys to Convene The national organization of Marys will hold its sixteenth annual outing at Broad Ripple park Thursday, Aug. 28. Mrs. Mary Baity, 2932 Washington boulevard, is president. Election of officei's will follow a basket dinner served at noon. Celebrate Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. William H. Slieek, Greenwood, observed their golden wedding anniversary Sunday at their home with a family dinner. Mr. and Mrs. W. I. Bouden were special guests. Mr. and Mrs. Sheek have four children living in Johnson county, Mrs. Lettie Kinick, Mrs. Cordelia Bay, Mrs. Edith Luper and Roy Sheek.
© business demands healthy men and women—and more than ever it is the survival of the fittest... L*OOR health is a distinct drawback to progress in business or social life. Underweight, lack of appetite, sluggishness, a dull mentality, nervousness and even skin disorders—boils and pimples — show their mark on the body, face and mind when the red-cells ara deficient in number. (See enlarged blood picture above.) Moreover a low red-blood-cell condition makes the system an easy prey to disease. When your red-blood-cells are only 80% you are NOT yourself—6o% is dangerous. The way to correct this condition is to take S.S.S.—the tonic that will help Jfts Nature build up and enrich your blood. h iV Millions of people have found it the easiest and surest way to keep themselves “fit.” If your vitality is slipping away from you, do lllal! try S.S.S.. Take it before each meal. Get if Hafflyi the largo size. AS all drug stores, Cs-saco, StmfrJl li.li jj lffi
.AUG. if, 1930
Intolerance Is a Plague to Humanity BY MARTHA LEE If there is a plague in this medically, scientifically, and spiritually lighted year of 1930, it is our insane intolerance, bigotry, and hatred of anything that is not our own. The greatest stigma on the nation for a generation or more was the Ku-Klux Klan and its methods of dealing with any one who did not follow the towpath of Klanism. Those who did not think and talk and act “Klan” were not safe on the streets In a town where Klansmen were in the majority and active. For centuries, men have fought and killed other men who did not think about things as they did. The brotherhood of man, the basis of Christianity, has been buried under a mountain of varied ideas as to what Christianity really is. Intolerance has caused international and national troubles for centuries. It has made men kill off other men, simply because these others did not hold to the same things. Individuals Affected This intolerance reigns in individual cases. Men who hate their neighbors for belonging to another faith than the one to which they belong; women who hate other women because they are members of a different nationality; women who hate other women whose outward morality is not the same as their outward morality. There is nothing so despicable as a righteous, virtuous woman whose main object in life is impressing other people with her righteousness and virtuousness. She is intolerant of all other women not so occupied. ; She considers that any woman who does not stand on the housetops and shout out her goodness must be doing some pretty underhanded things on the side. She becomes suspicious of any woman who does not spend her waking hours convincing other people what a saint on earth she is. Such women usually are possessed of a tongue that can spread selfpraise and slash another's character all in the same breath. Such women are dangerous. Reputations Ruined Many a young girl has had her reputation ruined for life by the venomous tongue of some righteous woman. Hemes have been broken up by the sneaking whispers of these. Love and happiness have changed completely before the bitterness of such tongues. Here is a case for you: Dear Miss Lee—l have been married two years and love my husband devotedly. Our marriage, which was secret, was disapproved of bv both our paryits. Mine because the boy was not of my religious faith, and 1 guess his for the same reason. Mv parents, in the meantime, have repented and have done some lovely things for us. They have completely lost the resentment thev had. My husband bought a home Just a few doors from where his parents live I have tried innumerable times to make friends with mv mother-in-law. but she still treats me as though I were something loathsome and evil, first because I go to a differeint church from theirs and secondly because she always has Insinuated a secret marriage was a marriage of shame. She is one of those women who never has committed a sin in her life, that she knows of. and spends all her time trying to find out details of the sins of others. She has been my enemy all the way through. I know It. She has fooled my husband, though, into believing she has accepted me. Now. that she has him believing, she is doing her work. She is talking against me to him. very subtly, so that he does not realize what she is doing. It is ruining our happiness. He has become suspicious of me. He saks me Questions and tries to trip me up on them. What can I do to save our happiness? WORRIED. Use her tactics. Very -subtly let your husband know what is going on. And if you can’t make the point subtly, come right out and talk turkey about it. There is nothing more difficult to combat than the influence of a woman like your mother-in-law. But you can if you try. And being on the ground floor, you can learn the proper methods by experience better than any one can teach them to you.
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