Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 208, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Vegetable Dishes Are Nourishing rBY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer /BANNED vegetables soon lose their appeal if served too often “au nature],' * but there are many made vegetable dishes that are delicious and nourishing for cold winter days. In serving a made dish, keep in mind that the “makings” increase the food value, but decrease the digestibility. The combination of ingredients is digested more slowly than the same ingredients served simply. For instance, soft boiled eggs are more quickly digested han a souffle. Made vegetable dishes are excellent for main luncheon dishes or with a light meat course for dinner.
BREAKFAST—Canned cherries, cooked wheat cereal, cream, commeal pancakes, syrup, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON—Hot bouillon, molded tuna fish salad, rye bread sandwiches, California grapes, milk, tea. DINNER New England boiled dinner, spinach and egg salad, deep dish apple pie, milk, coffee.
Corn souffle with pork chops brings up the protein calories of the meal to the required allotment. Corn and pimento timbales add a festive touch to planked hamburg steak. Scrambled eggs with com makes a nourishing one-piece luncheon dish. Com fritters are a pleasing “stretcher” for either a, luncheon or dinner when the man of the house brings a guest at the last minute. Com croquettes make an appetizing and novel addition to the planned company dinner. They can be made early in the morning and shaped ready for frying when wanted. e tt st CORN AND PIMENTO TIMBALES One pint can corn, 1 small can pimentoes, 1 tablespoon cream, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons canned tomatoes, V? teaspoon minced onion, 2 eggs, H teaspoon salt, % teaspoon white pepper. Rub corn, pimentoes and tomatoes through a fine colander. Add onion, salt, pepper, cream and .butter. Heat mixture to melt butter and add yolks pf eggs beaten until thick and lemon colored Beat whites of eggs until stiff and dry and ‘fold into mixture. Turn into well-buttered custard cups or timbale molds and set in a pan of hot water. Cover with buttered paper and bake twentyfive or thirty minutes in a moderately hot oven. When firm to the touch, the timbales are done. Turn out cups and garnish with sprigs of parsley to serve. CORN CROQUETTES One can com, tablespoons butter, 1-3 cup flour, Vz. teaspoon sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-8 teaspoon pepper, 1 egg, J /i cup cream. Put corn into a smooth sauce pan and add butter and cream. Mix and sift flour, sugar, salt and pepper. Add to corn mixture and stir until blended. Add egg slightly beaten and cook, stirring constantly until thick. Turn out on to a buttered platter and let stand until cool. Mold into coneshaped croquettes. Roll in fine crumbs, dip in egg slightly beaten with 1 tablespoon milk, and roll again in crumbs. Fry in deep hot fat until brown. The fat should be hot enough to brown an inch cube of bread in sixty seconds or 380 degrees F. when croquettes are put in and temperature maintained at 370 during cooking period.
SORORITY TO HOLD INITIATION SERVICE Miss Mildred Nordlah is in charge of the initiation service and the pajama party to be held for pledges of Phi Pi Psi sorority at the Whispering Winds Saturday night. She is being assisted by Misses Margaret Ralston and Betty Crowe. Pledges to be initiated are Misses Betty and Kitty Pursley, Ruth Lanham, Margaret Smith, Hariett Clary, Thelma Alston and Bessie and Martha Cross. A midnight supper will follow the pajama party, and breakfast will be served Sunday morning. Lavender and white, the sorority colors, will be used m decorating. MRS. FRED WHITE WILL BE HOSTESS Mrs. Fred White, 1442 Earl avenue, will be hostess to the meeting of the Child Welfare Club of tire Ben Davis Parent-Teacher Association at her home at 2 Friday afternoon. Mrs. Ed Foltz will be in charge of the musical program, and a discussion of the topic, “Training Our Children,” will be led by Mrs. Robert Axum and Mrs Dewey Hoss Officers to Be Seated Public installation of officers of the Gertrude Bretney Junior Club of the Women's Relief Corps will be held Saturday afternoon at Ft. Friendly. Mrs. Edna Pauley, national organizer, win be in charge of the installation. A luncheon will precede the ceremonies. Sorority to Meet Phi Kappa Sigma sorority will hold a business meeting tonight at the Spink-Arms. All members are requested to be present Dinner Bridge Scheduled It has been announced that the second dinner bridge in a series sponsored by the Marott will be held Wednesday, Jan. 28. Meeting Date Is Set Mrs. Charles Reagan will be hostess for the luncheon meeting of Kappa Kappa Kappa sorority Monday night. The meeting was postponed from Wednesday.
Polds Cheeked By modem vaporizing \ W*? ointment~Just rub on Mfc&VttKS iCVER t? MILLION Jftßt-* YEARLY
GOVERNOR’S DAUGHTER WED
j |
It was the first wedding to be held in Virginia’s historic executive mansion at Richmond in more than a quarter century, when Miss Suzanne Pollard, daughter of Governor John Garland Pollard, and Herbert Lee Boatwright Os Danville, Va,, were married. This picture, taken immediately after the ceremony, shows the bride catting the wedding cake while the bridegroom looks on. The former Miss Pollard has been serving as her father’s official hostess.
Glorifying Yourself BY ALICIA HART .
DAME NATURE may have cheated you when she was giving cut those perfectly arched eyebrows about which poets sing. But if you take matters into --ottr own hands, you can cheat her and create an artistic effect quite as lovely as any she ever did alone. But do not pluck your eyebrows now. Tli at vogue is out. Darkening eyebrows for beauty’s sake was done centuries ago, if we are to believe archeologists who have found pots of paint buried with mummies. Today, darkening the eyebrows is a matter of choosing .the right shade of eyebrow pencil, using it restrainedly, but first of - all deciding just what arch you want. a tt THE safest way to beautify the brows is merely to emphasize their natural line of arch or straightness until you make sure that it is or is not as becoming to you as another line would be. Chances are that the general line is right. You merely need more color here or there to broaden the brows’s appearance, or emphansize it here and there. Choose a brown, blue, black, mauve or qther colored eyebrow
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- /% C 1 tern No. O O I Size Street City Name State
; i"
This new interpretation of the moulded silhouette rates high with the sophisticated graduate. The cutest idea is the pinched-in waistline. achieved through gathers at each side seam. A circular flounce lengthens this one-piece affair. Bows and scallops are smart detail. Style No. 661 may be had In sizes 8, 10. 12 and 14 years. Size 8 requires 1H yards of 39-inch material with *4 yard of 39-inch contrasting. Eyelet embroidered batiste with sheer plain batiste colar with picot edge, made the original. The bows were of white grosgrain ribbon. It was decidedly French. When you send so your pattern, order a copy of our large Winter Fashion Magazine. Price of BOOK 10 cento. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap T carefully.
' pencil to match up with your brow’s own tone. The color of your eye shadow and your eyebrow pencil should be harmonious. Lashes, lids and eyebrows have to get together on this matter of mutually putting over the actual orbs themselves. tt a tt TO darken your eyebrows, merely take your pencil in your hand just as you would an ordinary pencil and trace a line over your brows. If you put it very, very lightly on the part of the eyebrow near the nose and slope it out to the tip ends near the temples, you will get the impression cf eyes set wider apart than if you darken your brows clear to their ends nearer the nose. It gives the impression of a pretty arch often, just to darken the eyebrows more right in the center than at either end. Follow upper line of your brows rather than the lower line when you get right in the middle of the brow and see if that doesn’t heighten your arch, too. Be very careful not to press harshly. You may irritate the eyebrows and make them red instead of the color you want. And do not make too' obvious a line in them.
Indian Objects Contributed to Art Collection A number of articles from the Niblack collections are being exhibite i in the print rooms of the Art institute during January. These objects of art have been contributed to the institute by Miss Sarah Niblack, in memory of her sister, Eliza Niblack, and to memory of their brother, Vice-Admiral Albert P. Niblack, by his widow. Among those presented by Mrs. Niblack is a group of objects made by the coast Indians of Alaska, collected by the admiral during the early years of his sendee as coast surveyor and explorer of the country occupied by Tlingt, Haida and Tsimahian tribes, ilis record of this survey, “The Coast Indians of Alaska and Northern British Columbia,” published in 1889, still remains an authoritative work on this subject. The Alaskan objects are arranged in one case, and include a small slate totam, beautifully carved; a wooden rattle, used to ceremonial dances, caned bone ladles, painted oars and baskets, MRST IDA WILSON NEW CLUB CHIEF Annual election of officers of the Boonville Women’s Club was held Tuesday at the home of Mm. Robert R. Wilson. Mrs. Ida Wilson was elected president. Other officers are: Vice-president, Mrs. Maude Kiper, and secretary, Miss Norma Maurer. Mrs. Ivor J. Robinson was elected substitute for Miss Mallie Weyerbacher, who will spend the winter to Florida. The study subject of the Club is- “A few Sidelights on Present Day Literature.” 1900 BOOK CLUB INSTALLS OFFICERS 1900 Book Club met Wednesday for luncheon at the home of Mrs. Taylor Carson, 2450 North New Jersey street, Mrs. Daniel McGowan gave a musical program. Officers who were Installed are: President, Mrs. Frank Streese; vicepresident, Mrs. John C. Mooney; treasurer, Mrs. James Sweeney, and record keeper. Mrs. Thomas Clark. Mrs. Charles Gavin, New York, and Mrs. Mary Garey, Edinburg, were guests at the meeting. EUGENIA KENNEDY WEDS AT CHURCH The marriage of Miss Eugenia Kennedy and Dr. George L. Spalding took place Wednesday morning at St. Joan of Arc church. The Rev. Maurice F. O’Connor officiated. A wedding breakfast at the Marott followed the ceremony. Out-of-town guests included Miss Margaret Kennedy, Paris, Tex., and Miss Flora Kennedy, Nashville, sisters of the bride. Theater Party Sunday Vagabonds Eight Club will give a theater party Sunday at the Rivoli. Miss Mary Jane Mayes is chairman. Guests will include Misses Gladys Sandell, Julia Wicks, Dorothy Mae Rice, Gwendolyn Wilson, Iris South and La Verne Conner ley.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Sisterhood to Present Minstrel ‘ Dress Rehearsal,” a “big time” show, will be presented Sunday night at Kirshbaurn Center by the Beth-El Zedeck Temple sisterhood. Miss Esther Lefkovits will be prima donna. Other principals Include : Misses Sarah Mauerer. Libby Mauerer. Btrnice WeisberK. Esther Miller. Dena Caplin. Leila Laepsky. Ida Solotkin. Rudy Klapper. Lucille Wlesbere. and Messrs. Sidney Haase. Hyman Grande. Sam Pollock. A1 Pollock. Sermon Brodsky. Samuel Henrtti and Merer Sagalowskr. Eph Levin is directing the production. A feature of the show will be the appearance of the Wild sisters, Eleanor and Lucia, who recently completed a tour of the RKO and Publix circuits. Members of the chorus are: Misses Alice Stolkln. Lillian Marks. Lillian Miller. Ruth Fraud. Helen BenowitiT Louise Welsman. Ruth Dorman. Estelle Oppenheim. Frances Schneiderman. Jeanette Bolotkln. Allan Berkowitz, Irvins Arnold, Bernard Siegel. Moris Katz. Morris Epstein. Joseph Roth bard. Sonny Hammerman. Leonard Rothschild. Howard Duiberger. Abe Klapper and Irvin* Levy. Mrs. Jack Deutscher is general chairman of the show and dance which will follow the performance. She is assisted by Mrs. Arthur E. Rose and Mrs. Jack Weiss. Mrs. Samuel Yaver is in charge of publicity. The dance committee follows: Mrs. Phillip Deutscher. chairman; Mesdames Joseph Helman. Joseph Yaver, Abraham Lipp. Philip Falender. Joseph Solotkin. Abe Sella. Louis Shane. Jacob Greenbaum. Lewis Sagalowsky. Louis Barnett. Samuel Oppenheim. David Sablosky, David Yaver and Louis Needleman. Ushers will be Samuel Yaver. Arthur E. Rose. Albert Shane. Ben Blteden. Jack Goldberg. Dave Yaver. Morris Epstein and Nathan Frand.
O. E. S. Officers to Be Installed at Beech Grove
Officers of Beech Grove chapter, 465, Order of Eastern Star, will be publicly installed at the Masonic hall, Beech Grove, at 8 Saturday night. Officers of the Indiana Grand Chapter, who will preside, are Ura Seeger, worthy grand parton, installing officer; Mrs. Blanche Regett, grand secretary, and Mrs. Daisy Christ, associate grand matron. Mrs. Hazel Coates grand Ruth, will sing, Those who will be installed are Mesdames Jeannette Lockwood, worthy matron; Alyce M. Clapp, associate matron; Anna O’Dell, secretary; Thelma Paugh, treasurer; Fern Ganstine, conductress; Mae Hougland, associate conductress; Ella Bronson, chaplain; Pearl Sedinger, marshal; Ethel Haines, organist; Reba Masten, Adah; Lillian Stogsdill, Esther; Margaret Jenkinson, Martha; Mary A. Neal, Electa; Hazel Marshall, warder; Miss Eula Faye Tonn, Ruth; Samuel Marshall, worthy patron, and George W. Shea, associate patron.
INDIANA ORDERS TO OBSERVE FOUNDING Circles of the King’s Daughters and Sons in Indiana are preparing to observe Tuesday, Jan. 13, or a day near this date as the fortyfifth anniversary of the founding of the international order by Mrs. Margaret Bottome of New York City and a group of associates who assisted her in the formation of the first circle. Mrs. Laura S. Goodhue, international executive secretary, and Mrs. Fred D. Stilz, Indiana branch president, have requested that the various circles observe the day with a public meeting, and to inaugurate a membership campaign in connection with the meeting.
jj£\;
Just Every Day Sense
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
THE commissioner of education. Dr. William John Cooper, says that the goal of public school training a hundred years hence will be “how to live” rather than “how to make a living.” That’s encouraging, because the quality, we most sadly lack is this particular knowledge. A good stiff course in “how to get along with people” might not come amiss in our educational system right now. Suavity, good manners, agreeableness, consideration for habits and wishes of others, and insensibility to the friction caused by contact with human beings, would bring about a pleasant reaction in our present crowded world. If we are to continue to live the dry goods box existence of the city apartment house, we should. at least learn the art of politeness in the herd. a a a EVERY time I hear somebody deploring fraternity life, I seem to see great rooms crammed wit lively girls, chattering, giggling, dressing, napping, reading, playing, primping and other great rooms running over with boisterous boys, who 101 l on chairs, tread on each other’s toes, clatter up and down stairs, whistling, shouting, singing, while the radio blats along ceaselessly; adding its screeches to the din. This fraternity life, mad as it seems to one who views it for a moment, surely must supply some of this needed aptitude for getting along with people. Any individual who emerges after four years from such a clanging, seething spot without longing to slit the throats of half the brother or sisterhood is equipped pretty well for life and should be able to keep serene under any condition. At least, there’s no denying that the ability to get along well with his fellows is the finest of all the irts of the educated man. Carried to its highest perfection, H would solve the marriage problem and kill for all time the mother-in-law joke.
RED JACKET
\tSiH | vA/ V? I I
Notable details of this red velvetteen Jacket for resort wear are the short sleeves, the lack of a collar and the gold metal hook-and-eye fastening at the waist.
MANY CITY PERSONS ARRIVE IN FLORIDA
Recent arrivals from Indianapolis at St. Petersburg, Fla., are: Mr. and Mrs. N. H. H. Clark, Denison hotel; Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Cooper. SpinkArms; Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Craig. 1842 Fischer avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Denny. 1642 Park avenue; Mr. and Mrs. Peter Liehr. 411 North Noble street; Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Mueller, 33 Meridian place. Mr. and tyrs. George H. Patton. 1131 West Thirty-first street; Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Robinson. 550 North Gray street; Mr. and Mrs. Grafton Shubrick and Edmund Shubrick, 35 West Forty-sixth street; Mr. and Mrs. Bert Walton. 919 Broadway: Mr. and Mrs. A1 Wysong. 5447 College avenue. Mrs. Alsace Alexander. 3431 Birchwood avenue: Mrs. H. H. Hadley, 3603 Washington boulevard: Mrs. Elizabeth J. Hawley. 622 East Twenty-first street: Mrs. E. J. Hunt. 411 North Noble street; Mrs. John Hair. 3173 Central avenue, and Miss Alma Morrow. Hotel English. F. ’J. Beckwith. St. Dennis hotel, Ben Pfaff. 249 West New York street; Joseph Van Deman, 4042 Bowman avenue; B. J. Gallagher. 418 East Nineteenth street; A. O. Robinson, 550 North Gray street; I. D. Sawyer. 904 East Maple road, and J. A. Whalen. 3661 Madison avenue. WILLIAM H. BOOK LUNCHEON SPEAKER ■William H. Book of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce will be guest speaker at the luncheon of the Altrusa Club at 12:15 Friday at the Columbia Club. He will tell the club of the emergency work program originated by the Chamber of Commerce for relief of the unemployed. Miss Bertha Leming Is in charge of arrangements, and Miss Mamie D. Larsh will preside. MISS POWELL TO GIVE BRIDGE PARTY Miss Lodena Powell will entertain with a bridge party tonight at her home, 61 South Denny street. She will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. Floyd Denny. Guests will be Misses Elnore Niemeyer, Nona Schumaker, Ruth Farmer, Alberta Wheeler, Loretta Oyler, Dorothy Scheidegger and Margaret Gividen. Pi Beta Phi Will Attend Luncheon Members of Pi Beta Phi Alumnae Club will be entertained at luncheon at the home of Mrs. Delbert Oscar Kearby, 3920 Washington boulevard, Saturday. The program is in charge of Mrs. Carlos Deeds, and will be on the constitution and history of Pi Beta Phi. Mrs. Russell Willson is chairman of arrangements and is being assisted by Mesdames Raymond C. Beeler, B. K. Westfall, C. R. Hamilton, W. H. Kelly; Misses Mildred Weld and Mary Yant. Mrs. Sielken Hostess Mrs. Herman Sielken was hostess at the monthly luncheon bridge given today for members of the Avalon Country Club at the Columbia Club. She was assisted by Mrs. E. C. Hervey and Mrs. Gage McCotter. ’Fifty-five reservations were made for the luncheon. To Install Officers Alvin T. Hovey post, W. R. C., will install officers at a meeting Friday at Fort Friendly. Sorority Will Meet Gamma Phi Zeta sorority will meet at 8 tonight in the Chamber of Commerce. County Attorney Chosen Ey Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind., Jan. B. Omar O’Harrow has been reappointed to serve another year as Morgan county attorney by the county commissioners.
x* "Buy Shoes at a Shoe Shop ” — lß-20 East Washington Street /fl ANNUAL | “Ts h SHOE SALE I Sweeping Reductions—Sensational Values Fine Quality Shoes for M en—Women—Children
Mrs: Ross Re-Elected by Mission Mrs. David Ross was re-elected president of the Flower Mission at the annual meeting of the organization held this morning at the Board of Trade. Other officers re-elected were Mesdames Robert Elliott, first vice-president; J. H. Lowes, treasurer, and J. D. E- rnston, recording secretary. Newly elected officers are Mesdames J. C. Buchanan, second vice-president; Robert Geddes, third vice-president, and W. C. Smith, historian. Mrs. Fred Noer, social visitor, was re-elected. Directors who were reelected are Mesdames F. H. Cheney, Preston Rubush, Lloyd Bowers and Walter Hatton. New directors are Mesdames Mathew Smith and Edward Ferger, Mrs. Thomas Barry was re-elected honorary director. New trustees named are Murray Auerbach, Paul Buchanan, Mansur Oakes and William L. Taylor. Trustees re-elected are Dr. Alfred Henry, Arthur V. Brown, Edgar Evans, William J. Mooney, Frank Fishback and Eugene Foster. Foster was chosen as chairman of the finance committee. He will be assisted by William Taylor. M. E. Foley was elected attorney. Mrs. J. C. Buchanan is chairman of the hospital committee, assisted by Mesdames Robert Geddes, W. C. Smith, S. H. Cheney, Fred Noer, J. C. Lowes, J. C. Ermston, Preston Rubush and Robert Elliott. The membership committee is composed of Mrs. Geddes and Mrs. Lloyd Bowers. Mrs. Buchanan and Mrs. Rubush were chosen delegates to the woman’s local council and Mrs. Geddes will represent the mission at the council of social agencies.
W. C. T. U. Group Hears Address by Miss Drake
“Scientific Temperance” was the subject of discussion Wednesday at the all-day meeting of Meridian W. C. T. U. at Roberts Park Methodist Episcopal church. Miss Flora Drake, principal of school No. 21, was speaker. Miss Drake presented essays written by forty eighth grade pupils on, “What I Know About Alcoholic Beverages.” She told of the work of the teachers at the school with pupils along the line of scientific temperance, instruction. Posters by school children on the subject, were displayed by Mrs. C. W. Ackman. The Rev. A. H. Kenna, pastor, greeted the members of the union. Mrs. Lewis E. York, president, presided.
Card Parties
Holy Cross Altar society will hold a card party tonight and Sunday afternoon and night at the school hall, 1411 East Ohio street. Ladies’ auxiliary to the Firemen’s Association will hojd a card party tonight in parlor D at the Denison. Mrs. Raymond Rose and Mrs. Robert Newby will be in charge. WRITERS CLUB TO PRESENT PROGRAM Writers Club will meet Tuesday night at the Y. W. C. A. The program will include the reading of original compositions of the members, and -will be known as “Home Talent Evening.” The program will consist of music, Mrs. Dovie O. Jones; a short story, Walter Carnahan; poetry, Miss Anna Bprnman;- short story, Mrs. Josephine Duke Motley, and a market review, Miss Inez Hinchman. D. A. R. CHAPTER WILL HEAR STORY Mrs. Fletcher Hodges will read an original story as the program at the meeting of the Cornelia Cole Fairbanks Daughters of the American Revolutibn, at 2:30 today at the Propylaeum. The hostesses are Mesdames William J. Brown, Winifred Miller, Orville F. Shattuck and Frank L. Powell. W. C. T. U. Will Meet Central W. C. T. U. will hold a business meeting at 2 Friday at the Fletcher American National bank. Mrs. F. B. Clark will be in charge of a period of devotions, and Miss Adele Storck will give a lesson in parliamentary law. A report will be given by the committee in charge of the Christmas tree at the Wheeler Rescue Mission.
PRIMA DONNA
• is; ‘ v", st, " y -..we jfjpfi fit'tfili Mbs Esther Lefkovits Miss Esther Lefkovits is prima donna of “Dress Rehearsal” to be presented Sunday night at Kirshbaurn Center under auspices of Beth-El Zedeck Temple sisterhood.
Personals
Mrs. Henley Holliday, 4554 Broadway, is spending several weeks at Miami Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hogan, 3103 North Meridian street, are spending a few days at the Edgewater Beach hotel, Chicago. Miss Lucille Weddle and Miss Mary Alice Wilhelm will spend the week-end in Hanover and attend the Phi Gamma Delta house dance Friday night. Mrs. Peggy Smith, 2147 North Pennsylvania street, has returned from spending the holidays with her aunt, Mrs. Ellen Kelper Stephan, Columbus, O. Mrs. Emma ’W illiams, Detroit, is here to spend the winter with her son, O. M. Watson, 315 North Senate street. CHAPTER TO GIVE COLLEGIATE DANCE Butler university chapter of the Kappa Delta Rho fraternity will entertain with a post-holiday dance at the Hotel Antlers Friday night. Guests will include members of Kappa Delta Rho chapters at Franklin college, Indiana, Illinois and Purdue universities, and representatives from all fraternities at Butler. Hunter’s Rythm Kings will play, and the music will be broadcast over station WKBF, Professor and Mrs. Gino Ratti, Professor and Mrs. S. B. Moncado and Mrs. Edna M. Christian will be chaperones. Concert to Be Given Indianapolis Matinee Musicale will present the Marianne Kneisel string quartet at 3 Friday in a concert, open to the public, at the John Herron Art Institute.
There May be Poison in YOUR System!
STEP out tomorrow morning with the fresh buoyancy and briskness that comes from a clean intestinal tract Syrup Pepsin —a doctor's prescription for the bowels —will help Jrou do this. This compound of resh laxative herbs, pure pepsin and other mild ingredients will clean you out thoroughly—without griping, sickening or discomfort. Poisons absorbed into the system from souring waste in the bowels cause that dull, headachy, sluggish,
bilious condition; coat the tongue; foul the breath; sap energy, strength and nerveforce. A little of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will clear up trouble like that, gentlv, harmlessly, in a hurry. The great difference it will make in your
CIe* iWART Clothes on If EASY CREDIT
JAN. 8, 1931
Enters Race for Office of DA. R. Formal announcement has been made to Daughters of the American Revolution societies throughout the country of the candidacy of Mr.‘ s James B. Crankshaw, Ft. Wayne, for the office of vice-president general of the national society. Mrs. Crankshaw is regent of the Indiana society. She was indorsed for the national office at the annual state conference in Richmond in October. She has been Indorsed by Mrs Harriet Vaughn Rigdon, Wabash., treasurer-general; Mrs. John Newman Carey, Indianapolis, honorary vice-president general; Mrs. Roscoe C. O'Byrne, Brookville, state re-gent-elect; Mrs. James M. Fowler, Lafayette, past librarian general, and Mrs. William H- Pettit, regent of the Ft. Wayne chapter. Fourteen members of the national society have announced their intention of being candidates for vicepresident general. Only seven will be elected.
Kiwanis Heads to Take Part in Conference Midwinter conference of district} and club officers of the Kiwanis Clubs in Indiana will open Wednesday night with a banquet and ball at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The banquet and bah will be a part of the inauguration ceremonies during which James E. Fischer, governor, and eight lieutenantgovernors will be installed. The Rushville ladies’ quartet, composed of Mrs. Derby B. Green, Mrs. Samuel L. Trabue, Mrs. Carl Beber and Mrs. Edith B. Ashworth, with Mrs. H. W. Mawzy, accompanist; the male chorus of twenty voices of the Shelbyville Kiwanis Club and the male trio of the Greenfield Kiwanis Club, will sing. HAPPY GO LUCKY CLUB SETS PARTY Members of the Happy Go Lucky club will be entertained at a pajama bridge party tonight at the home of Mrs. R. K. Cordill, 418 South Butler avenue. Miss Verna Hollcraft will be ani honor guest. Other guests will include Misses Ruth Adolay, Esther Hansen, Alma Pieper, Elizabeth Pottage, Bertha Schlensker, Lucille Schlensker and Ann Lepple. Musicale Is Arranged Theta chapter, Phi Beta Pei sorority, will hold a formal musicale tea Sunday afternoon at the Colum - bia Club. The committee in charge includes Misses Mary Donahue, Raffaela Montani and Ruth Palmer.
feelings over night will convince you of its merit. Dr. Caldwell studied bowel troubles for forty-seven years. This long experience enabled him to make bis prescription just what men, women, old people and children need. Its natural, mild, thorough action and its pleasant taste commend it to everyone. That’s why “Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin,’* as it is called, is the largest selling laxative in drugstores everywhere.'
Dr. W. B. Caldwell's ** SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's Family Laxative
