Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 258, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1931 — Page 9

MARCH 7,1931.

Business Women to Convene Discussion of the contribution of the service clubs to the welfare of the United States will be discussed In 1.250 communities during national business women’s week, at public relations dinners Thursday when representatives of service organizations will be asked to summarize exactly what their groups have done for community progress since they were organized. Business and Professional Women's Clubs in cities from coast to coast will sponsor the dinners and representatives of all men’s and women’s service clubs will be asked to co-operate in arrangements. Clubs to Report After all service clubs have reported. a tabulation will be made to deteiv.ine what has been their collective contribution to the community, later these figures will be compiled at headquarters of National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs to determine what they have accomplished in 1,250 communities. Other projects suggested to business and professional women’s clubs during the week are business equipment shows in which merchants exhibit all up-to-date appliances which are recommended for modern offices; educational programs focusing upon adult education; fellowship luncheons at which leading business and professional women in each community are honored and vesper services for discussion of what contribution the modern business woman can make to international relations. Hold Mass Meeting Public relations dinners and mass meetings featuring adult education will be principal projects Indianapolis Business and Professional Women’s Club program will start with a dinner at which time the public relations committee, headed by Miss Mamie Larsh, chairman, will sit with honor guest* at the table of Miss Adah O. Frost, president. The meeting will be held at the Woman’s Department Club, 1702 North Meridian street. During the hour immediately following dinner various club presidents will give two-minute talks on outstanding work done by their respective clubs. Present Italian Sketch Mrs. Geline M. Bowman, first vice-president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs, and general chairman for the bi-annual convention of the national federation, to be held July 6 to 13, at Richmond, will be the principal speaker. Mrs. Bowman's subject will be “Business Woman of Today—Her Opportunities and Responsibilities.” Washington high school music department will present “An Italian Street Scene,” under the direction of Miss Etta SchrefT, composer of the skit. Cast includes Josephine Halburg, Marguerite Halburg, Maurice Fowler, Jessie Savage, John Turk, Louis Fuller. Members of the public relations committee with Miss Larsh are Misses . Helen D. Brown, Isabell Drummond, Olga Ilg, Gertrude Lieber, Louise Mclntire and Frances Moder.

Girl Scouts

Doris Virginia Fessier and Patty Falling were enrolled Wednesday as Brownies in the Lucky Star Pack. New candidates: Mildred BtefTen. Janice Connor. Troop 2; Jeanette St. Clair. Troop 3: Lois Myers. Troop 5: Billy Jean Redmond. Jeanne Callahan. Audre Thomas, Gene Lassewelf. Ann Smith. Billy Snyder. Troop 13: Jeanne Deiterlck. Troop 22: Betty Retz. Troop 35; Sfarvbelle Miller. Lois Lawless. Troop 39; Jeanne Henry. Dorothy Ann Steck. Mary Janet Mummert, Troon 50. Girls Invested this week as scouts Include: Mildred Lineman. Troop 34; Mary Edith Lawson. Troop 35: Margaret Bundy. Troop 41: Prances Haney. Troop 46: Betty Note. Elolse Risley. Troop 48; Elizabeth Crossen, Troop 50; Barbara Straus. Troop XO. Amie Jose’s patrol of Troop 1 had a spread at the home of Martha Clark Monday night and passed hostess badge to Mrs. Montgomery. Troop 1 Is planning a hobby fair for their parents. Captain Burkhart of Troop 2 took seven girls on a hike to Lick creek, where they passed their flre-build-ing test. Girls of Troops 9 and 23 attended the Indian lecture at Caleb Mills hall Friday. Troop 39 has started anew contest. Patrols have been reorganized with Vesta Kettery and Lillian Lowe as leaders. Dorothy Poland won first prize, a Girl Scout ring, and Vesta Kettery second, Girl Scout stationery. Mrs. Montgomery Lewis talked to Troop 40 on court of awards Thursday. Ruth Rehm was selected as anew patrol leader of the Sky Hawk patrol in Troop 50. Saturday is the last day for blue cards as the order for badges for the court of awards must go in at that time. GUESTS IyVITED TO CLUB PROGRAM Writers’ Club will hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 Tuesday at the Architects and Builders building. Reservations may be made with Mrs. John A. Dyer, 2848 Washington boulevard. An original manuscript will be read, and a program of Irish songs sung in observance of St. Patrick’s day. Guests are invited. Give Square Dance Christian Park Drama Club will give an old-fashioned square dance at the community house tonight

KITE'S Ul AKWTKKIk WATCH REPAIRING K.mn.l J|* knry ■>ha|h* < rv.lnls I nlirntkuhtr fryttiiln lOr An\ M.tin-in i hi; 01)0 "Wi ClmuiitK KJ.Oa 4r**rl K<-i>lil„k Rite’s Jewelry Shop 43 S. Illinois St.

What’s in Fashion?

‘Ladylike’ Spring Details

Directed By AMOS PARRISH

NEW- YORK, March 7.—Fashion is a lady now! And quite v. lovely one, too, with all the little tricks of modesty and dignity that gave the real old-fashioned ladies so much of their charm. This spring there’s nothing bold or brazen about fashion. No loud, startling effects designed to get attention. Quite the other way, in fact. Just see how fashion has changed lately. Bare shoulders for daytime are going out of date, and getting out of fashion. Covered shoulders are in fashion. They’re more ladylike. Instead of the sleeveless dresses you used to meet walking down the avenue, spring fashion’s more ladylike dresses have cap sleeves or sleeves that reach to the elbow. When dresses are sleeveless, they’re more apt to be worn for active sports, or are dresses that have a little matching jacket to be slipped on when you go out. Even the short-sleeved dresses have jackets, so that on the street the arms are quite covered. In fact, this Jacket costume—the dress with its own jacket—is one

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Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

npHESE are sad days for evangelists. A certain gentleman of this calling, now touring the south, lately wailed in a local paper about the falling off in attendance at the House of God. He is convinced that wickedness is prevalent because, as he naively explains, “preachers no longer are invited out to chicken dinners as they used to be.” What memories that phrase awakens! Did we not, as children, gaze longingly in at the dining room door while the visiting preachers consumed all the best parts of the fattened fowl? The delicious odors of those lost dinners are wtih us yet. The chocolate cake, rich and inviting, was reduced to a few crumbs under the onslaughts of the pious. The dumplings disappeared like leaves before the locusts. They gobbled up the home-made ice cream before our very eyes. a tt tt AND as the hours passed and the great and godly, replete with rich food, held forth upon saintly subjects, our childish prejudice grew. We ran behind the house and shook our fists at the preachers, fearful that God might strike us dead, yet made bold by hunger and the injustice of having our favorite foods snatched from us. Perhaps this is one reason why our hearts now hold so little love for the brethren. Boys and girls who had to be content with chicken necks have become men and women who do not admire evangelists. These laborers in the vineyard of our Lord, as they always called themselves, were the best fed people in our section of the country. They passed from one threshold to another and at every place were presented with the best the household could afford. What, I wonder, will these good men say when, upon the last day, they are confronted by all the innocent chickens slaughtered for their sake and all the children who were deprived of drumsticks and white meat because of them? DINNER DANCE TO OPEN CLUB SEASON A dinner dance March 28 will formally open the season of the Highland Golf and Country Club. An Easter egg hunt for children will be held April 5. The social committee includes Ralph G. Ittenbach and Bert C. McCammon, chairmen; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weyl and Mr. and Mrs. John H. Rau Jr. Mrs. Smith to Entertain Mrs. Clark H. Smith, 3102 North Harding street, will entertain members of Alpha Tau Zeta sorority Monday night.

To All Who Suffer Stomach Agony, Gas and Indigestion

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of the most fasL'onable you can choose to wear this coming season.

Gloves with short sleeves If a Jacket doesn’t go with the dress, and the sleeves are short, fashionable women put on gloves—gloves long enough to cover most of the bare part of the arm. Gloves Are Longer Six-button, eight-button, even twelve and sixteen-button gloves. Fashion-knowing women who know it’s smart to be ladylike are choosing all these lengths to wear with their dresses whose sleeves aren’t long. Along with covering up the shoulders, covering up the neck is in

A “ladylike” scarf neckline fashion. Not entirely covering it, of course. But covering up more of it than used to be the fashion. Nearer the base of the throat is the fashionable height for necklines. You’ll find cowl necklines draped higher, the point of a V-neckline not so deep, a suit or a coat closing higher up in the front; scarfs attached to dresses, suits and coats to fill in empty spaces. Collars Tie Near Throat Some of the newer fashions have little standing collars that tie close to the throat, high-fastened turneddown collars, or quaint oval necklines that just follow the line of the base of the neck. Many separate scarfs are used, too—as you know—to take the bare look from a plain neckline. Fashion is ladylike in her skirt lengths, too. That’s not new. She has been that way for a year. But she’s even more careful about it now than she was. It’s rarely you ever see a street dress shorter than middle calf now. Os course, you mustn’t get the impression that because it’s ladylike, Fashion is dull. Because it isn’t. It’s even more exciting than it was—because these ladylike tendencies add new ideas to almost every costume. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) NEXT: Spring coat day in Amos Parrish’s Spring Fashion week presentation.

Jacket for street wear

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Fish Is Fine for Health Year Around BY SISTER MARY NXA Service Writer It is the custom for many housewives to serve fish regularly once or twice a week during the Lenten season, but every woman would do well to do this throughout the year, for fish is a delicious and nutritious meat equivalent. Like meat, all varieties of fish are rich in protein and contain variable amounts of vitamins A and B so essential to human growth and health. Sea fish contains iodine in variable amounts. Fish is recognized as an excellent food for children and one which can easily be served at the family table. If adults must have a highly seasoned dish, this can be supplied by the sauce, which should be served separately. Buy Good Fish If you want your family to really like fish, be sure to select a good quality, remove bones, if possible, before serving, and use great care in cooking. Keep in mind that fish are “seasonable,” just like fruits and vegetables. in selecting fresh fish, look for these points, bright eyes, bulging and clear; gills bright red in color; skin bright and shiny; flesh firm’and elastic. The dealer should always scale, clean and bone the fish for you. The variety of fish chosen usually determines the method of cooking. With the exception of large fish that are wanted served whole for some special reason, broiling seems to be the ideal way of cooking all fish. But for variety, there are other practical ways of epoking particular kinds of fish. Baking Is Good Method Baking is a commendable method, for it, too, retains the best qualities of the flavor and the value of the fish itself, prevents fish*cooking odors from invading the house, and requires less watching than broiling. In buying fish, estimate that one pound of solid flesh, free from bones, will serve three persons. Children should be urged to cultivate a taste for fish if they do not naturally like it. It’s an easily digested food rich in phosphorous as well as its other nutriments and

Daily Menu

BREAKFAST—Stewed figs with orange sections, cereal, cream, sour cream waffles, syrup, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON Scallops poached in milk, toasted muffins, celery and carrot salad, brown Betty, milk, tea. DINNER Stuffed baked had dock,twice baked potatoes, creamed broccoli, orange and raisin salad, snow pudding, milk, coffee.

very satisfying. Broiled, baked or steamed fish, served with lemon juice, should find a place in a child’s diet at least twice a week during the spring months when meals are gradually becoming “lighter” and lower in heat-pro-ducing foods. The sauce served with fish has much to do with popularity. A fish sauce should make a contrast in color and texture and add piquancy and tone to the natural fish flavor without destroying It. The fish lacking in fat can be served with a rich sauce, while the fat fish should have a tart relish as accessory.

Card Parties

Big Sisters maternity branch, Catholic Women’s Union, will give a card, bunco and lotto party at 8:30 Tuesday night at St. Roch’s hall. Moose drill team, drum corps, will hold a card party at 8:30 Sunday in Moose temple, 135 North Delaware street.

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Union Trust Travel Bureau — Easter Week Community Tour INDIANAPOLIS to ANNAPOLIS, Md., and WASHINGTON, D. C. $35- 00 J*. During Easter Vacation, March 29th to April 2nd All expenses paid—price includes railroad fare for round trip—all meals—all sightseeing as per itinera rv -first-class hotel in Washington. Here is a tour for the whole family—a wonderful educational and pleasure tour to the most beautiful and historic spots in our country. Complete Details May Be Obtained From RICHARD A. KURTZ, Manager Travel Bureau The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis

H.UHIOH TBIISTa 120 East Market St, Riley 5341

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- . _ tern No. £.O 0 Size Street r City Name State ...

238

ONE-PIECE TYPE WITH CAPE The sleeveless dress Is ever popular, if it has a cape collar, or there are so many times just a sleeveless dress seems inadequate. This sprigged dimity opens at the center-front beneath the tiny bow. Style No. 238 is designed girls of 4,6, 8 and 10 years. Imagine it in yellow-dotted swiss with the edge of the cape and the hem of the dress finished in cocoa brown binding. Size 8 requires 2% yards, 35 or 39-inch. Order a copy of our new Fashion Magazine. Atractive 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.

Personals

Robert G. Ledig, a student at Northern Illinois College of Optometry, Chioagc. is spending week-end with his parents, Dr. and Mrs. G. R. Ledig, 3240 Park avenue. Honors Mrs. Daniels Mrs. A. H. Steinbrecher entertained with a luncheon Friday in the Blue room of the Marott in honor of Mrs. Harry Daniels.

Radios—Atwater Kent, Majestic, Jackson-Bell (Sold on payments, If desired) VONNEGUT’S 120 E. Washington St.

Play Is Given by Sophmores of Tudor Hall —.. 0 Members of the sophomore class at Tudor Hall School for Girls presented a play, “Quality Street,” by James Barrie, in the school auditorium at 8 Friday night. Miss Charlotte Thompson, dramatic instructor of the school, directed the production. Members of the cast were: Misses Hope Heisner, Eileen Booker, Ruth Lilly, Betty Kartong, Mary De Prez, Dorothea Craft, Rhoda Steckei. Alida Sherwood, Betty Tharp, Mary Wildhack, Irving Mosley, Philena Hamlll, Marjorie Emmerson, Phyllis Harvey and Lynette Potlitzer. Miss Wildhack was assistant director and stage manager. Miss Lilly designed the costumes and Miss Moxley was business manager. Misses Jane Law and Julia Freyn were ushers. Miss Mary Paxton Young assisted in designing the scenery. Five members of the senior dramatic class, Misses Mary Holloway, Mildred Spurgeon, Jean-

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CONFIDENCE and $5,821,000 in new construction work to back it

Indiana bell Telephone company

MISS WAINSCOTT IS WED AT FRANKLIN

Mrs. William

Mrs. Hoffmark

Entertains Visitor Mrs. L. C. Cline entertained with a luncheon in the Crystal dining room of the Marott Friday in honor of Mrs. James Stewart, New York, who is the house guest of Mrs. Frank Lewis. ette Thoms, Frances Height and Mary Paxton Young were in charge of makeup.

NOT ONLY is the Indiana Bell Telephone Company spending the sum of $5,821,000 for new construction projects throughout the sate during 1931, but in addition this company spends an average of more than $4,000,000 for operating expenses yearly in Indianapolis alone. This latte, sum includes over $3,000,000 paid in salaries and wages to some 1,800 employees within the city. f The "Economical \ v "Voice of Millions J

MISS M’KINNEY IS NAMED CLUB HEAD Miss Margaret McKinney was elected president of the Chatter Box Club at a luncheon meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs Arthur Wabnitz, 5221 Pleasant Run Boulevard. Miss Thelma Wabnitz was chosen secretary-treasurer. Decorations were carried out in St. Patrick’s day color and design. Cards were played following the luncheon. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. John Clark, 1504 North Gladstone avenue, Thursday, March 12. Mrs. Bell Sage, Buffalo,’ N. Y., was an out-of-town guest. Gives Bridge Party Mrs. Harvey Belton, 148 Hampton drive, was hostess for a luncheon bridge party in the Crystal dining room of the Marott, Thursday. Guests were Mesdames J. William Wright, H. F. Molting, Chester Stayton. Ralph Lochry, Mason Light, William Doeppers and L. A. Enslinger.

Wainscott, Edgewood, announces the marriage of her daughter Helen Danpler, to Paul Hoffmark. son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hoffmark, 1821 Cruft street, which took place at Franklin, Sept. 20. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffmark are making their home with the bride’s mother.

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