Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 249, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1931 — Page 6

PAGE 6

DINNER PARTIES TO FEATURE END OF MAROTT SEASON'

Spring Ball Will Close Social Year A number of dinner parties, to be given by guests and friends cf the Marott, will precede the annual spring ball of the hotel tonight, which will formally close the Marott social season. Among those who will entertain are Mr. and Mrs, Ellwood Ramsey, w’ho will have - as their guests Messrs, and Mesdames \yayne O. Stone, T. J Lippincott, Asa Chambers and Charles Lee. M; and Mrs. .fames E. Fischer will entertain Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Russell, Miss Betty Tyler and Arthur Hood. Mr. and Mrs. L. Ert Slack will have as their guests Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Carson. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Elliott and Robert Brewington will be the guests of Mrs. Robert Elliott. Tire guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. McFerron will be Messrs, and Mesdames Edward Dinner, Harry K. Mcllroy, Russell Sumner and Robert Malenkamp. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Noble will have as their gneste. Mr and Mrs. Virgil Gebaufi. Mrs Edmond D. Severns will entertain Mrs. Ola Robertson, Bloomington, and Mrs. Beulah Kinnear. Others who will have dinner guests are Messrs, and Mesdames A M Robindon, Walter Zirpel, Julian Fix, Mrs. C. Vernon Griffith,, Mrs. Robert W. Long and Walter W Bond. Inter Nos Club Holds Meeting 9 at Hoke Home Inter Nos Club held a guest meeting today at the home of Mrs. Fred Hoke, 3445 Washington boulevard. Mrs. De Marchus Brown spoke on “Robert Louis Stevenson,” Mrs. Donald U Bridge, accompanied by Mrs. Albert S. Campbell, sang the following numbers as a part of the program: “Temple Bells,” “Less Than the Dust,” and “Kashmiri Song.” The tea table was centered with a, plateau of spring flowers in the club colors, pink and lavender, and lighted by pink tapers. Mrs. Ralph B Clark and Mrs. B. S. Gadd poured, assisted by Mesdames Leonard Almy Smith, Robert W. Clark, Charles Mclllwaine Bridge, Anton Schackel, Van P. Murphy and Dr. Edith Davis. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Harry Orlopp, Mrs. E. A. Brown and Mrs. Schackel. Mrs. Ralph Clark, president, will preside. Musical Group to Have Piano Recital at Tea Mrs. A, W. Macey, 325 Campbell avenue, will be hostess Friday afternoon for a musicale tea, sponsored by the chorale section of the Matinee Musicale. Mrs. John Robert Craig, who has arranged the program, will have a paper on “Russian Element in Music.” The program will feature Max Klezmer, pianist, a pupil of Mrs. Mabel Wilie Leibe. Mrs.- Craig also will read an original poem, “Aoed” (Spirit of Music). Miss Dorothy Dauner will assist Mr: Klezmer in the orchestral parts of his program, which will include Anton Rubenstein's compostiions. During the tea hour Joseph Macey, Mrs. Macey’s son, and a student at Butler university, will sing. Alpha Chapter to Meet Alpha chapter, Zeta Rho sorority, wrill meet at 8:15 tonight at the Chamber of Commerce building. The Hew Aiienru Week End Treatment For Rheumatism Friday Night Till Monday Morning —Pain Gone—Agony Gone —Back On the Job. LARGE 8 OZ. BOTTLE 85c It Must Do As Advertised Or Money Back, Say Hock’s Dependable Drug Stores. Here's the swift modern 4S-hour way to get the uric add out of your joints and muscles and overcome Rheumatism, Neuritis and Sciatica. Start to take Aiienru as directed when you go to bed Friday night—staj - in bed as much as possible till Mondav morning—Aiienru acts double fast when the body is relaxed and rested. A large S oz. bottle of Aiienru costs but S5 cents at Hook's Dependable-Drug Stores or any live drug store in America and it must do as advertised or money back.—Advertisement.

Stubborn Coughs Ended by Recipe, Mixed at Home

Here is the famous old recipe which millions of housewives have found to be the mo*'i dependable means of breaking up a stubborn, lingering cough. It takes but a moment to prepare and costs little, but it gives real relief even forathose dreaded coughs that follow severe cold epidemics. From any druggist, get 2% ounces of Pinex, pour it into a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of better remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so good that even children like it. Not only does thi3 simple mixture soothe and heal the inflamed throat membra nee with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood, and acts directly upon the bronchial tubes, thus aiding the whole system in throwing off the cough. It loosens the germladen phlegm and eases chest soreness in a way that is really astonishing. Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine Norway Pine, containing the active agent of creosote, in a refined, palatable form. Nothing known in medicine is more helpful in cases of distressing coughs, cheat colds, and bronchial troubles. Do not accept a substitute for Pinex, It in guaranteed to give prompt relief or money refunded •-Advertisement,

A Few Ideas and a Little Work Make Last Year’s Suit a 1931 Model

Just a few alterations may change toot last year's suit into a nerfect 1931 model. Mrs. Annette Go'Y. In the third article of a series which she has written (or The Times and >£A Service, tells yon how to proceed. BY MRS. ANNETTE GITH Dressmaking Consultant for the Home Maki, . Center, New York. MAKING last year’s coat and skirt suitable for this spring is a trick that doesn’t take magic, but just seme ideas and a little work. Since every fashion showing this year increases the importance of the suit for spring, it is desirable to keep last year’s suit In Its same character, but just change it enough to make it stylish, make it long enough and give it the touches that mark it 1931. Since boleros were in vogue last year to a tremendous extent, youi

National Sorority Officers to Be Honor Guests at Tea

Mrs. Ralph B. Clark and her daughter. Miss Maryellen Clark will be hostess from 2:30 to 4:30 Sunday at tea at their home, 3322 Guilford avenue, in honor of the three national officers of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, who will attend the

CLUB HOSTESS

:• :i. “i. ;

Rosemary Dedert

An Ce Or Club will be entertained Saturday night at the home of its president, Miss Rosemary Dedert, 3336 Kenwood avenue. Members may bring guests.

ZONTA PRESIDENT IS GUEST AT DINNER Miss Sue Stuart, president of the Zonta Club, was honored by the club with a birthday dinner at the Lumley tea room Tuesday night. The program included the singing of Zonta songs, by Miss Frieda Heider. ' . . Following the dinner new member services were held for Mesdames Lucile Proctor, Laura Green and Miss Eve Wiles.

Just Every Day Sense

BY MKS. WALTER FERGUSON

A NEWS dispatch from Paris says that Europe is alarmed on account of an excess of women. The women, too, are alarmed, I' imagine. Somebody has it figured out that if the discrepancy of births continues, polygamy will be an inevitable result. That’s natural. Polygamy or free love. The war is directly responsible for such a condition in the various European nations. It wiped out the finest young men over there. But polygamy and free love will not be the only result in a land where women outnumber the men so greatly. The other thing that will happen is that, the women soon will be running things. Put several million extra women into any nation, with no chance for home life, and you’ll have them setting out to take a hand at regulating something else. tt tt a LOOK at these figures. In another ten years, when the present supply of children will have grown up, there will be 18,000,000 more women than men in Europe. Happily, America still has an excess of males. We are young and what is known as colonial country. But give us another war or two, and we’ll be in Europe’s fix. What’s to be done about it? Moralizing is not going to help. It’ll do no good to tell those 18,000,000 girls to be pure and chaste and virtuous when you have made their world barren of men and thwarted them of woman’s rightful hertiage of a mate. It’ll do no good to rant about the evils of illegitimacy. It’ll do no good to preach to them that woman’s place is in the home. Where are these 18,000,000 girls going to get homes? All this is one of the aftermaths of the great war that was going to do such wonderful things for humanity. While the world was being made safe for democracy, it also was being made safer for matriarchy. Which is some- * thing for the men to think about. Beta Tau to Meet Beta Tau sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Annabelle Land, rural route 6. Miss Martha Hodge, 1844 Howard street, will be hostess for the meeting of the Alpha chapter. Omega Chi sorority, tonight. Pledges, who wiH4.be guests, are Misses Leona Bullard, Ruth Curry and Gertrude Henn. *

| may have a bolero suit that needs fixing a little to make it wearable this year. Last year’s bolero suit must have its skirt lengthened, and often its jacket, too. Or you may want to change a dress and cardigan suit into a bolero and frock this yea*. This type of suit is easy to change this year. If it is a bolero you want with your frock, and your frock's skirt lengthened, if it happens to be a print, match up the color of the design in plain color, and put a straight band around the bottom of the skirt, cut the coat off in jaunty rounding form and add a banding of the plain material to edge its ! lower surface. This makes an entirely different type of costume from a dress and cardigan and it makes an old boi lero jacket suit look different if the

! state meeting Saturday at the Columbia Club. The guests are Mrs. Gilbert L. Van Auken, national president, Syracuse, N. Y.; Mrs. James P. Collins, national editor of Lyre, official magazine, La Grange, 111., and Mrs. Mark E. Uncapher, central province president, Gary. A program of Alpha Chi Omega songs will be given by a double quartet of Beta Beta alumnae, including Mesdames James Ogden, Donald U. Bridge, C. H. Best, Roy H. Kenady, S. G. Howard, Misses Betty Martindale, Lucinda and Katherine Smith. Miss Henrietta Wood will be accompanist. Mrs. Robert L. Mason, Misses Hannah Keenan, Lorinda Cottingham and Martha Cassel, Union City, will assist in the dining rooirj. Assistant hostesses will be: Mesdames Scobey Cunningham, C. E. Ccttingham, E. H. Jenne, L. G. Wild, G. S. Wilson James M. Ogden, Donald U. Bridge, Orval S. Hixon, Robert W. Clark, and Miss Mildred Blacklidge, all of Indianapolis; Mesdames Harry Smith, Greencastle; Edward M. Childe, Martinsville, HI., and Miss Estelle Leonard, Union City. Mrs. Clark, the hostess; Mrs. Cunningham, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Childe and Miss Leonard are the only living founders of the sorority. Mrs. Van Auken, while in the city, is the house guest of Mrs. Clark and Miss Blacklidge, 6121 Central avenue. Mrs. Collins and Mrs. Uncapher are Mrs. Bridge’s guests, at 5423 North Pennsylvania street. Miss Martha Cassel is the guest of M<ss Clark and Miss Cottingham, 3641 North Pennsylvania street. Pep Club to Meet Miss Marguerite Power, Central avenue and Nineteenth street, will entertain the Pep Club tonight at her home.

Women Voters Hear Report on Chicago Polling System

The executive board and the budget committee of the League of Women Voters met jointly "today in the League offices In the Illinois building. Mrs. Walter S. Greenough gave a report on a national meeting of the efficiency in government committee which met Monday and Tuesday in Chicago. Mrs. Greenough gave details of

Mrs. Woodger Will Be Guest at Bridge Fete Mrs. Robert Shideler will entertain tonight at her home, 3064 Washington boulevard, with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. Herbert Woodger, who was Miss Kathryn Buxton before her marriage. Her guests will include: Mesdames George Buxton, Norval De Motte. Everett Brooks. Alan Morgan. George Hilgemeier Jr.. E. E. Whitehill. Charles Walker, E. N. Hill. Philip Vickery. Ruth Eiteljorg. Ellison Fadley; Misses Grace Thomas. Joyce Jackson. Marthalou Kennedy. Jane Bird. Margaret Godfrey and Betty Moorehead. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. W. A. Buxton. LUCILLE CREASSER HONORED AT 'PARTY Mrs. Ralph Brooks and Mrs. Kesler Trueblood, Lexington, entertained Tuesday with a party honoring their sister, Miss Lucille Creasser, whose marriage to Burnet J. Powell will take place Saturday. Guests included: Mesdames Alvin Hoover. W. N. Creasser. Roy Griffith. Theodore Hauser. Viola Talbott. Thelma Kinsey. Ralph Grave Morr*s Rupert. Misses Ruth Griffith. Lillian Seitz. Ruth Kincaid. Marguerite Saul. Margaret Dirk. Irene Engledow. Louise Harshman, Hazel C. Goldsby, Elizabeth Dlrey and Jane Conley. colonial Tarty WILL BE GIVEN Mrs. Robert Shank, 1647 Sharon avenue, will be hostess for a Colonial party to be given tonight by members of the Arnica Club. Members of the entertainment committee are Mesdames W. R. Burcham and Thurm in Washburn. A program of patriotic games will furnish tlm entertainment. Decorations win be in keeping with the Colonial motif, and will be carried out in the club colors, red, white and blue. Introduce Pledges Pledges will be introduced and plans made for a spring rush party at a meeting of the Beta chapter, Sigma Delta Tau sorority, at 8 tonight at the Chamber of Commerce building. Church to Have Dinner Annual birthday supper sponsored by the Ladies' Aid society of the Second Moravian church, will be held from 5:30 to 7, Friday. Mrs. George Golder is chairman. Club WiU. Meet Miss Virginia dolman, 1108 College avenue, will entertain members of the Del-Lr-Nor Bridge Club at her home Thursday night.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

printed material in it is pointed up and emphasized by the plain hems. In lengthening last year’s suit, the way to get more length in the skirt depends entirely upon the skirt’s cut. If it is a circular skirt, you can cut off an inch at the top of it and get width enough to drop it until you can attach it to a hipyoke. Add Pleated Flounce If it is a plain skirt, you can try the addition of a pleated flounce of different material, a circular flounce of contrasting material or just a hem of fancy material that goes nicely with the suit. Making last year’s bolero suit into a coai dress for early spring this year is an admirable usage of a soft wool suit. The way to do it is this: Suppose it is a navy blue or a tan bolero suit In one of those semisheer crepes. Get about one and a quarter yards of plaid material, in the same weight as the suit’s wool. Make a curved hemline of this plaid, facing it back with goods the color of the dress or rolling the hem. Whether this is a plain or circular skirt, using the plaid hem is an easy way to lengthen. Cut Out Fitted Yoke Take the little bolero coat, rip out the rolled hem or faced one and gather It. Then cut from the plaid fabric a fitted yoke that runs up above the waistline and below it and laps over for fastening. Ease the bolero into the top line of this banding and finish on the wrong side so you can wear it as a coat if you ever want to. For an added bit of decoration, put a little plaid band up the cuff. You probably will wear this outfit with a little gilet, for nothing is smarter than the street frock this year. But if you want to make it a suit, that’s that too. A third and very satisfactory way to fix over last year’s suit ties up with the vogue for plain coats and fancy skirts. Use Tweed Coat If you have a good tweed coat left from a suit that has its skirt worn out, especially if it is plain blue, tan, brown or any plain color, do get enough material to make yourself a skirt and have a tricky little “mixed suit.” One of the diagonal lace weaves in wool would make a good skirt, or a checked, pin-stripe, or even a fancy weave in a neutral beige or gray fabric. Make your skirt gored, or a wraparound, and then put bandings of the skirt’s material on to the coat and belt it, making it a modified Russian suit. Or you can have a plain colored, perfectly plainly tailored coat, fitted to the body, used with a coat skirt of fancy fabric and your blouse a third material, with some thought to color contrast. Next—Making over clothes for the adolescent.

the round-table discussion of methods of modifying the primary to make the nominations more representative of the voters, held Monday. ‘The second day of the meeting Judge Edmund K. Jerecki, Cook county judge of elections, arranged an official visit to various polling places. In her report of this tour Mrs. Greenough described their simultaneous arrival at one poll with the police car, which arrived on time to prevent the theft of the voting machine by a group of hoodlums. It was announced that the League plans to feature a discussion of the primary at the national council meeting.

Card Parties

Independent Order of Shepherds will entertain with a card party at 8:30 Thursday at the Modem Woodman hall, 1025 Prospect street. The social club of Sacred Heart church will entertain with bunco and lotto at 2:15 Thursday afternoon at the hall, 1530 Union street. The Brotherhood of American Yeomen will give a card party at 8 Friday night at its hall, 310 Castle Hall building. Major Harold C. McGrew, auxiliary 3, United Spanish-American War Veterans, will give a card party and box social at 8 tonight at Ft Friendly, 512 North Illinois street. SHOWER IS GIVEN FOR BRIDE-ELECT Mrs. Ernest D. Hunter, 1541 Ewing street, entertained Tuesday night with a personal shower in honor of her sister, Miss Henrietta Jett who will be married Sunday to John Payton Jr. Orchid and white, the bridal colors, were carried out in the decorations and appointments. The guests included: Misses Louise Reiber, Edith Carr, Nonna Schaefer. Helen Peck. Annalee Parson and Margaret Ernst.

Mrs. Buchanan Is Hostess to Assembly Women’s Club

Members of the State Assembly Women’s Club held a luncheon today at the Marott hotel, with Mrs. C. J. Buchanan as the hostess. She was assisted in receiving by Mesdames John’ W. Kern, David Ross, Lew Shank and A. D. Hitz. Following the luncheon a musical program was presented in the parPHI TAU DELTA TO PRESENT PROGRAM Alpha and Beta chapters of Phi Tau Delta sorority will celebrate the seventh anniversary of the founding of the organzation with a banquet at the Antlers Saturday night, Feb. 28. The program will include toasts by Mrs. Noble G. Morgan and Mrs. Clayton M. Adams from Alpha chapter and Misses Edith Cade and Hazel Meadows from Beta chapter. Mrs. Eugene Wilcox, violinist, will play, accompanied by Miss Estryl Adams, Miss Thelma Wallace, guest artist from Gamma Phi Alpha sorority will give readings.

Musicale Is to Be Given by Sorority Kappa chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, will present a musicale tonight at the home of Mrs. Charles Pfafflin, 1844 North Pennsylvaina street. The guest artist will be Miss Sara Elizabeth Miller, pianist. Others on the program, which has been aramged by Miss Georgianna Rockwell, are Misses Martha Ann Rundell, violinist, and Mary Moorman, contralto. The hostess will be assisted by Mesdames Leon Hicks, Lorenze B. Jones, Misses Myla Hermann and Frances Wishard. The program follows: Piano—- “ Sonata.” Opus 31, No. 2 Beethoven Largo-Allegro. Adagio. Allegretto. Miss Miller. Violin— . , “Second Concerto” Burleigh Miss Rundell. Piano—“lntermezzo." opus 119, No. 3 Brahms “Rhapsody” opus 119, No. 4 Brahms Miss Miller. Vocal—- “ The Hillsides of May” Bragdon “The Tides” Farley “The Terrible Robberman” Treharme Miss Moorman. Mrs. Anita Wandell Bell, Piano—•‘Prelude” Rachmaninoff “Etude Tableaux” Rachmaninoff “Blue Danube Waltzes” Strauss-Schultz-Evier Miss Miller.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- 1 _ _ tern No. 1 O 7 Size Street City Name State

POPULAR JUMPER Here’s a cute one, and as simple as A, B, C to make it. It’s a lightweight woolen in rather vivid green coloring. The binding and leather belt choose a deep green shade. The tailored guimpe is a yellow beige washable flat crepe silk. Style No. 187 may be had in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3 yards of 39-inch material for dress and hat with 2 yards of -35-inch material for blouse and 2(4 yards of binding. Wool jersey in guardsman blue with white jersey guimpe is jaunty. Order a copy of our new Fashion magazine. Attractive styles for women, misses and children. And instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.

lors of the hotel by Mrs. Mary Traub Busch, vocalist. The speaker for the afternoon was Mrs. Laura New of Charles Mayer & Cos., who spoke on “Porcelains, and the Betting of a Table.” The day’s program concluded with a business meeting in the arcade, when plans for next week’s activities of the club were made. Next week will mark the close of the club’s season, which occurs with adjournment of the legislature. lOWA ALUMNI TO HAVE CELEBRATION Alumni of lowa state university and its friends will celebrate lowa night with a dinner at the Claypool at 6:30 Monday, March 2. Invitations have been issued to alumni In nearby cities. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Werwyn G. Bridenstine of the Indianapolis association. Professor Herbert Martin of the philosophy department of the University of lowa will be the speaker,

What’s in Fashion?

Four Sleeve Lengths Smart

Directed By AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK, Feb. 25.—D0 you like short sleeves ... or do you hate ’em? Whichever way it is, you can wear what you like and be fashionable this spring. Because spring fashion isn’t satisfied with one sleeve length for daytime. She picks out four and declares them all equally smart. And these four fashionable sleeve lengths for daytime costumes are (1) wrist length, (2) three-quarter lengths, (3) just-above-the-elbow length and (4) cap sleeves. Notice that the word “sleeveless” isn’t among them. Sleeveless dresses this spring are in fashion—when they’re dresses for active sports wear, for evening wear, or for afternoon with matching jacket. Wrist Is Usual Length Wrist length, of course, is the usual length for sleeves. And there are lots of different kinds of wrist length sleeves. Pla.n straight ones, sleeves with narrow cuffs, with wide cuffs, with gauntlet cuffs, sleeves close fitting at the wrist, but with a puff or fullness above and wide, flowing sleeves. We’ve had this length sketched at the top of the column of illustrations—a sleeve decorated with one of the fashionable gauntlet cuffs of a lingerie material. Next in the illustrations is the three-quarter sleeve. You’ll find this not only on spring dresses, but on spring coats and suits as well. Wide and Loose Usually this three-quarter sleeve is quite wide and loose. Often you’ll find it in a jacket that’s worn over a dress with wrist-length sleeves—the sleeve of the dress showing beneath the sleeve of the jacket. And when a suit has three-quar-ter sleeves, the blouse usually is long sleeved. If it isn’t, longer gloves are worn—long enough to cover the bare part of the arm. The third fashionable sleeve length for spring daytime is the one that extends to just above the elbow. The arm is half covered when you wear this sleeve, and it’s a nice length for an afternoon dress. And the shortest sleeve of all is the cap sleeve that covers just about one quarter of the arm. It's a length you’ll find often in jacket dresses—the costume of dress with matching jacket. And usually the jacket will have a wrist-length sleeve. Although it’s so short, it’s fashionable, too, to wear in the street without a coat—provided you wear gloves with it. Usually it’s finished in some interesting way—with a narrow ruffle or pleating, with an edging of some sort, or even with a tiny cuff. Os coiorse it takes a little more thinking about your costume when sleeves are so varied. Because, naturally, all these lengths aren’t becoming to everybody. Watch ’Em if . You’re Stout A good idea is to look long in the mirror when you try on a dress with just-above-the-elbow or threequarter sleeves, to see whether or not they cut your figure at the wrong point. Because if they’e becoming they’re not fashionable for you. Watch these three-quarter sleeves, too, if you’e inclined to be stout. Since they’re usually wide and loose, they make you look wider through the body when the arm is And—if the elbows aren’t pwlty, it’s smarter to cover them up with sleeve, then to wear the short sleeves that reveal them. * (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) NEXT—Amos Parris reports on coats that look like dresses.

Camp Fire Guardians to Have Training Institute Here

E. O. Snethan, second vice-presi-dent of the board of directors of the Camp Fire Girls, will give the address of welcome at the dinner Friday night at the Chamber of Commerce building, which will open the Training Institute for Guardians on Saturday. Mrs. Ralph Stratman, Mrs. R. W. Baker, Franklin, and Mrs. Helen Potts, Brazil, are among the guard-

MISS TAYLOR WILL MARRY IN APRIL

Mr. and Mrs. William Joseph Taylor, 1109 North Delaware street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha Ann, to Thomas Madden, son of Mrs. John J. Madden. The wedding will take place in April. Name Hostesses Members of the Sigma Phi Alpha sorority will hold a social meeting at the home of Misses Goldie and Lena Fivel, 3256 Ruckle street, at 8 Thursday night.

Take Pepsin This New Way and End Stubborn Indigestion If you have a weak, ban! acting, gassy, rebellious stomach, it won’t take but 2 or 3 doses to prove you can turn it into a strong, healthy one, capable of digesting the heartiest meal without after-distress. Nature says your stomach needs pepsin—needs it three times a day at every meal and the stomach remedy that you need most of all is Dare’s Mentha Pepsin. It will do you more good in two weeks than all the old time relievers will do in a lifetime. That’s just the reason that its sales in good drug stores all over America are enormous—that’s why Hook’s .Dependable Drug Stores are selling dozens of bottles every week. Take it and you’ll learn the secret of how to always have and keep a strong, healthy stomach. If after taking one bottle you are not completely saUsfled—money back—Advertisement.

I oJrtvt- iltsur ii:

Sunshine Club Holds Patriotic Lunch, Meeting The Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside held its regular luncheon meeting today at the Cynthia Bell tearoom. Decorations, consisting of red roses, candles and nut cups, were in keeping with George Washington’s birthday. During the serving, Mrs. Haskell Gift, reader, and Mrs. Bessie Hermann, vocalist, presented a program. Cards followed the luncheon. Mrs. J. A. Biddle was the hostess, assisted by Mesdames Frank Bird, Haskell Gift, Letitia Evard, Fred Uhl, J. J. McGovern and Miss Louisa Smith, Cincinnati, O. Chapter Will Meet Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Antlers. Pledge services will be held for Mrs. Carl Schubert, Misses Elsie Addison, Martha Morrison and Ben Bell.

ians who will speak. Miss Janet Kellar, associate field secretary, also will talk. Mothers and fathers of Camp Fire Girls and interested persons are invited to be guests. An exhibit of Camp Fire material will be on display, including specimans of handicraft, photographs, supplies and publications. Camp Fire Girls may visit the exhibit from 1 to 2 Saturday. A demonstration Council Fire will be held at 7:30 Saturday night. All Camp Fire Girls are invited to attend this ceremonial meeting. DINNER BRIDGE TO BE HELD AT CLUB Avalon Country Club will hold an informal dinner-bridge party at 6:30 Saturday in the ladies’ dining room of the Columbia Club. Dr. and Mrs. Merrill J. Brown will be hosts.

... because it absorb* I Map away from the surface THE secret of Kotex superiority is really very simple. It absorbs five times more than cotton and it absorbs laterally, away from the ™nrmrf y -if : tzOmga ** “ perfected ir. dry and comfortable. That s very [he hblratories. important. . , . Because both sides are equally k °°?’5 **> absorbent, there’s no danuet of po* <ils P?f ble ■*“ ?^, oas of wome " j sible embarrassment by wrong ad- old . fash j oacd method of sanitary j ustment. Wear it on either side with —lt— > equal protection, equal comfort. Kotex is adjustable. You can re- mjr apu. move layers of filler as year needs change. It deodorizes thoroughly tui.

FEB. 25, 193 T

Art Clubs of Indiana to Convene Art department of the Woman*. Department Club has issued invitations to art clubs throughout the state to attend its annual observance of “Indiana Day in Art,” at 2 Tuesday at the John Herron Art Institute. This is the occasion of the twentyfourth annual exhibition of Indiana artists. Wilbur D. Peat, director, will talk. For convenience of the out-of-town guests, a luncheon will be served at 12:30 at the clubhouse, 1702 North Meridian street. Mrs. Robert Shingler, luncheon chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. R. L. Konecke and Mrs. Louis A. Fleury. Mrs. Frank F. Brandt, who will be in charge of the dining room, will be assisted in serving by: Mesdames A. C. Rasmussen. L. P. Robinson. A. F. Wickes. George Horst. Othniel Hitch and Miss Katherine KHz. Reservations may be made before Saturday with Mrs. W. C. Gardner. ‘lndian Music Will Be Topic of Club Talker "American Indian Music” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. Clyde E. Titus at the meeting of the Junior Matinee Musicale at 2 Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Charles L. Maxwell, 401 East Fiftvsixth street. A musical program, illustrating the talk, will be given by Misses Rosalie Holman, pianist; Dorothy Tilgmann, reader, and Jean Chenoweth, violinist, members of the club. The program follows: Plano—- " Dance of the Medicine Man - ' Benald “Indian Dance in the Fireiicht". .Mclntvre Rosalie Holman Reading from Hiawatha Longfellow Dorothy Ti’gmann Violin—- “ From the Land of the Sky-blue Water - ' Cadnrnn “Indian Lament” Dvorak Jean Chenoweth

Personals

Mrs. Thomas Taggart, 1331 North Delaware street, and daughter, Mrs. D. Laurence Chambers, and Miss Judith Chambers, have returned from a several weeks visit in Miami, Fla. Mrs. Walter C. Kelly, 5859 Forest lane, is the guest of Mrs. Ernest Spickelmier of Indianapolis, who, with her children, is spending the winter in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Mrs. Ray Shelley of Chicago is also the guest of Mrs. Spickelmier. Mrs. A. H. Carpenter and Dr. Leroy Huboard, Warm Springs, Ga., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Love, 5354 North Meridian street. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Taggart, 4715 Washington boulevard, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Kendall Mills in Saginaw, Mich. They will also go to Grand Rapids, Mich., to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Taggart Jr. Dr. Carl B. Sputh, 5735 Central avenue, has gone to Chicago, 111., to attend the eye, ear, nose and throat clinic at Northwestern university. Mr. and Mrs. A. H- Moore and daughter Florence, 3111 Broadway, have returned from a trip to Lake Lure and Asheville, N. C.

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