Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 259, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1931 — Page 11
march io, 1931.
League to Hold Show at Florists' The Indianapolis Junior League will co-operate with Wiegand's Soru. florists, in the flower show to be held at the florist shop, March 17-21. it was announced at a meeting of the board Monday at the home of Mrs. Garvin Brown. Members will be in the shop Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. On these days a small admission fee will be charged, which will go to the occupational therapy work carried on by the league at the Riley hospital. Miss Ruth Burford, provisional membership chairman, will be in charge of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. W. P. Anderson. It also was announced that Mrs. Benjamin D. Hitz, president of the organization, will be speaker Monday at the luncheon of the Woman's Rotary’ Club.
Personals
Mrs. Ernest Knefler, Cambridge, Mass., is visiting her daughter, Mrs. George H. Denny, 2239 Park avenue. Mrs. William Byers and son John Butler Byers, Knoxville, Tenn., have returned after spending several weeks with Mrs. Byers’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Butler. 4835 Central avenue. Mrs. Lillian Boomer has returned to the Spink Arms after spending the winter in Florida. Miss Mary Louise Minnick will entertain with a dinner party Friday night preceding the Bowery ball to be held at the Athenaeum under the auspices of the actors and workers guild of the civic theater. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Scnwitzer, 4401 Washington boulevard, have left for a trip to Arizona and Mexico. Nathan Farb, 4244 Central avenue, has gone to Hot Springs, Ark., for the remainder of the winter.
Card Parties
Mrs. Alice Walker, 633 East McCarty street, will be hostess for a card party at 8:30 tonight for the benefit of the National Home Cottage Fund. Marlon Council 738, Security Benefit Association, will hold a euchre and bunco party at 8:30 Wednesday at the hall, 116 Ms East Maryland street. The committee includes Mesdames George Carr, Leona Daglish, Flora Mescall and John Wills. Miss Laura Ashton is chairman of a covered dish luncheon to be held by Women’s Benefit Assocition No. 140, Wednesday noon at 230 East Ohio street. A public card party at 2:30 will follow. Winema Social Club will hold a card and bunco party at 8:30 tonight at Red Men’s hall, Seventeenth street and Roosevelt avenue. EIGHTH DISTRICT CLUBS IN PARLEY The .twenty-fourth annual convention of the Eighth District Federation of Women’s Clubs is being held today in BlufTton at the First Reformed church. Mrs. A. M. Decker, district president, was to preside at the business sessions which many prominent club women in the state and district were expected to attend. Mrs. Edwin F. Miller, Peru, state president, was to speak at the afternoon session. Mrs. Frank Ashbaucher, president of the Wells county federation, is general chairman of arrangements. BETA DELPHIANS WILL HAVE DINNER Mr. and Mrs. Carl Elliott, 4710 Carrollton avenue, will be hosts at a covered disli dinner for members of the Beta Delphian society Saturday inght. The committee on arrangements includes Mesdames Walther Jensen, chairman; Chester Berry, Edgar G. Reese, and Floyd E. Williamson, president. An informal program will follow dinner.
Eczema on Boy Lasted Over a Year. Healed by Cuticura. "My boy had eczema very badly. It began with a breaking out of pimples and blisters on his face and hands. It itched and burned causing him to scratch, and the eczema was much worse on his hands. He lost some sleep on account of it The trouble lasted over a year. “I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample of each. After using them a few days he got relief. I poreheaed more and m about three months he was completely healed." (Signed) Mrs. J. W. Moore, Sammerfiekl, Ohio, Aug. 15,1930. Smo Sc. QmSment X aad 50 0. Talcum 25c. Sold every has*. Sample each fraw Address: ‘TsScon Laboratories, Dapt. H. MaWea, Maas.”
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Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind Enclosed Ana 15 cento for which send Pat- _ __ _ ten No 2 7 3 Size Street City Name State
Very simply cut is this smart dress. And there are lots of things about it that the heavier women will like. The cross-over lines need no introduction. The one-sided softly falling jabot rever deserves mention, for it detracts beautifully from breadth. There is still another point—the clever arrangement of the hemline. It displays a comfortably flared fullness. A printed crepe silk in dark ground is smartness itself for allday occasions as used for the original model. Style No. 273 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust. Plain crepe and thin woolen make up interestingly in this model. Size 36 requires 4)4 yards 39-inch with % yard 10-inch lace and % yard 35-inch lining. 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 preferred). Wrap coin carefully. MEETING 'DATE'OF CLUB IS CHANGED Mrs. Demarchus Brown will speak before the Travel Study Club of the Brookside Park Woman’s Club at 10 this Thursday, instead of the regular meeting day, next Thursday. Her subject will be “Spain,” and will be a followup of her last lecture.
Schedule of Events for Month Given The March social calendar for Meridian Hills Country Club has been announced by the management. The regular monthly luncheon bridge party was held today for members and their guests. Mr®. C. E. Collins and Mrs. Arthur Buttler were in charge of arrangements. The fifth session of the ladies’ luncheon bridge tournament will be held at 1 next Tuesday. The sixth and final session will be played March 31. Saturday night, the club will hold the regular dinner bridge party for members and guests. Dinner will be served at 7. The ladies luncheon bridge tournament committee includes Mesdames W. D. Littell, V/. H. Tennyson and Charles D. Rau.
MRS, LANGDON GIVES , DINNER PARTY
Mrs. Russell C. Langdon entertained with a dinner party Monday night in honor of Mrs. Sparta Fritz, who is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weiss. Mrs. Fritz will return to Germantown, Pa., Wednesday. Covers were laid for twelve guests. CHURCH GROUP TO HOLD STYLE SHOW Members of Circles 1 and 4, Plymouth Union, of the First Congregational church at Sixteenth and Delaware streets, will sponsor a style show at 8 Friday. Young women of the church will wear the gowns which will be loaned by an Indianapolis firm. Mrs. Charles Garrard Is chairman. MISSVANMAT RE IS PARTY HOSTESS Miss Miriam Van Matre entertained Monday night with a bridge party at her home, 3222 Ruckle street. Her guests inc.uded Misses Genevieve Stafford, Margaret Schuck, Caroline Vann, Alice Keller, Dorothy Dutton, June Julian and Marcelle Elsa. MRS. TOPH AGAIN IS ELECTED HEAD Monday Club held a meeting Monday at the home of Mrs. L. E. Schultz, 3828 Kenwood avenue, at which time Mrs. Ollah B. Toph’was re-elected president. Other officers are: Mesdames Edward Ferger, vice-president; Frank McCaslin, second vice-president; Edward E. Files, recording secretary; John W. Noble, corresponding secretary, and W. C. De Miller, treasurer. Pep Club Party Slated Mrs. Muriel Rost will entertain members of the Pep Club at a St. Patrick’s day bridge party Wednesday night at her home, 2719 North Capitol avenue.
CITY GIRL TO WED
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Miss Lida Warring Mrs. George Dransfield, 129 East Southern avenue, announces the engagement of her sister, Miss Lida Warring, to Earl Hunter, Baltimore, Md. The marriage will take place March 21, in Baltimore. Mr. Hunter is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Berry Hunter of Indianapolis. The bride-elect is a member of the Theta Sigma Delta sorority. Among the parties to be given in honor of Miss Warring before her wedding is a linen shower which Mrs. Dransfield will give Thursday. Misses Betty Mercer, Kathleen Spear and Gertrude McNeece also Will entertain.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Right and Wrong Styles Shown by Maggie Rouff
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What’s wrong with this picture? There is something wrong, even though the famous Paris couturiere, Maggy Rouff, made the costumes. She herself admits there’s something wrong. In fact, she says it’s wrong on purpose. Maggy Rouff is in America—here to study American women and find out what kind o fclothes they like and want. And she showed the right and wrong of these costumes herself. The costume on the right is right. The costume on the left is wrong. In the picture you can’t see the color difference, but there are other things you can see easily. Lacing Right and Wrong Look at the lacing on the right costume. It’s neat, flat, inconspicuous. Now look at the lacing on the wrong costume. It’s too wide, too loose and stands up in a conspicuous way, Maggy Rouff points out what kind of clothes they like out. And the extra bit around the blouse neckline is just too much, she says. The sleeves of the wrong jacket sire too long. They wrinkle in an ugly way, Mme. Rouff thinks. Nor does the jacket fit the figure as neatly as the one of the right costume. Both costumes are of white jersey. But the blouse of the right one is a clear, bright green. The blouse of the wrong costume is a grayed, muddy green. There’s a difference in the skirt pleats, too, though it doesn’t show up in the photograph. But the right pleats are tigher and flatter than the ones in the wrong costume. Costumes in Duplicate These are to of the eight costumes Mme. Rouff has brought with her from her Paris salon. Really they are four costumes—this one for sports, one for afternoon, one for evening and an evening pajama costume. But they’re made in duplicate. And in each case one costume js right. Chic. Individual. And the other has something wrong about it. Not a very big something necessarily, but just wrong enough to take away the chic. Maggy Rouff believes that line is
TA) AMOS PARRISH Says: £y§. Spring Frocks Are iifjUb Truly Feminine 70 • • • Ayres Downstairs Store Agrees El 9 A • • • and Presents Glorious hm <li (T Assortments for Your Approval ... at Only—ffi/rev slfl /® o g\ Ayres’ Downstairs Store follows fash/gj_*3 V&A & /T / A ion trends closely, and as soon as a sash- \ ion is accepted, you’ll find it in our stocks \! \| ••* at a LOWER PRICE! That’s the V \| K\[ J sort of service this alert store is offering “■ ms VJ I, | Begin choosing your spring wardrobe * iftn tI tomorrow! There are more than 150 / /II J distinct styles to select from . . . every / ’/< f A j t one feminine in line . . . and just as trVci S^mh el coVi ( 4’Mllf f \ smart as Paris itself. Jacket frocks, pud ne flJed d B k\rT i Hil r\l \ two-piece, peplums, draped lines, etc. Matching Jacket has M mgM i*f I * Wmk bows at cuff. In / ;wf / :1;f t 1 u _ _ .. printed flat crepe. / a < I U; \ \ Right: Canton crepe ' trimmed with lace I 1 j I ™vr cuffs and vestee. A % I,] f | one-piece frock that IS I l A
the foundation of the really smart costume. She also believes that every woman should try to express her own personality in her costume. She’s convinced that costumes with perfect lines and but little trimming best bring out each woman’s personality. And she’s showing in these right and wrong costumes just what she means and how it works. She shows how wrong lines and wrong color can make a woman look older. How too much decoration, or the wrong kind of decoration, can overwhelm the woman and make the costume more important than the wearer. And how very slight changes in fabric or line or color can detract from daintiness and refinement. But —she thinks the American woman is “chic.” “American and French women are alike in at least one thing,” she says. “They both are sophisticated and they both know how to choose chic, sophisticated clothes,” (Copyright. 1931, by Amos Parrish) Laundry Saver If you separate your laundry into similar kinds of articles as you bring it from the line, sprinkling, ironing and putting away is all made simpler.
Why not stay at home with a good book these snowy, blowy days? You will find an enticing selection at THE LENDING LIBRARY All the Newest BIOGRAPHIES TRAVEL BOOKS FICTION MYSTERIES The Junior League Shop 158 East Fourteenth Street
CITY'S NEW AIR BEACON READY TO BEJIGHTED Army Planes Coming Here on Wednesday tor Dedication. Governor Harry G. Leslie will turn the switch at 8:15 Wednesday night officially lighting the city's new air beacon on the Merchants Bank building for the first time. Twenty-six planes from city airports and groups of army and national guard from other cities will circle the beacon in dedicatory ceremonies, starting at 3:15 p. m., Lieutenant Paul Zartman, program chairman, announced today. Flying in formation, planes from Municipal, Hoosier, and Capitol airports will take to the air at 3:15 and at 5:15 remainder of the twenty-six planes will join them. ts Broadcast From Air Communication with city radio fans will be set up by a national guard plane, from 5:15 to 5:30, piloted by Lieutenant Matt G. Carpenter and carrying Lieutenant Zartman as radio operator. Description of the cermonies and the beacon, erected by the Lincoln Oil Refining Company at a cost of $50,000, will be broadcast. National guard planes from the One hundred and thirteenth observation squadron, Stout field, and from Schoen field, Ft. Benjamin Harrison, will engage in night flying in the rays of the beacon until 8:30. Visiting fliers are expected from army posts at Wright field, Dayton, O.; Scott field, Belleville, 111., and Selfridge field, Mt. Clemens, Mich. Dinner at Club Dinner in honor of the Governor, Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan and Lincoln company officials will be served at the Columbia Club at 6 p. m. with the following city aviators as guests of honor: Major R. F. Taylor, One hundred and thirteenth observation squadron commander, national guard; Lieutenant S. T. Smith, commander of Schoen field, Ft. Benjamin Harrison; Bob Shank. Hoosier airport president; Major H. Weir Cook, Curtiss-Wright Flying Service of Indiana manager; Lieutenant E. H. Jose, Capitol airport, and Paul H. Moore, Municipal airport manager. All pilots participating in the dedication will be guests at a dinner in the Claypool at 9. EXTEND REALTY EVENT Closing Time for Contest Now Is Set for Friday. Time for closing the miniature booth designing competition sponsored by the Indianapolis Real Estate Board in connection with the tenth annual realtors’ home show, has been extended to Friday afternoon, Fay C. Cash, committee chairman, announced today. The judges will be Sydney A. Sullivan, publicity directors of L. S. Ayres & Cos.; Harry E. Wood, director of vocational education in the public schools, and Ed W. Hunter, secretary of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. The competition originally was set to end Monday afternoon.
PLAY PLANNED
w Mr. Stanley Miss Schmidt Miss Elsie Schmidt and Oran Stanley are members of the cast of ‘‘Die Gunstige Vorzeichnungen," which will be presented within a few weeks by the German club at Butler university. It will be given in German, according to the annual custom of the club. Other members of the cast are Miss Dorothy Kohlstaedt and Max Einstandig. Professor Milton Baumgartner, sponsor of the club, is directing the production.
JACOB JACKSON DIES HOME Overall Manufacturer Was Born in Poland. Jacob W. Jackson, 77, president of J. W. Jackson <si Sons, overall manufacturers, died Monday at his home, 1 East Thirty-sixth street, following a short illness. He was born in Poland, came to America when he was 9, and has been associated with the firm for thirty-three years. Surviving a are the widow, Mrs. Clara Jackson; two daughters and two sons. Mrs. Isaac Efroymson of Indianapolis and Mrs. Mendel Wolf of Shelbyville, and Joseph and Harry Jackson, associated In the business. Rabbi M. M. Feuerlicht will have charge of the funeral at the home of Mrs. Efroymson, 2801 North Pennsylvania street, at 10 Wednesday. Burial will be in the Indianapolis Hebrew Congregation cemetery.
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Delightful Spring Cruises to the WEST INDIES An interesting and instructive sightseeing cruise in the blue waters of the Caribbean—the palm-fringed islands of the West Indies—the Isthmus of Panama—the old world cities of South America. Complete details may be obtained from RICHARD A. KURTZ, MANAGER TRAVEL BUREAU The Leading Travel Bureau of Indianapolis ft UNION TRUSTS 120 East Market St RI ley 5341 Sle^p... and wake refreshed INDIANAPOLIS to LOUISVILLE Every evening an aO-etoel sleeper gfides out of the Traction Terminal, Indianapolis, at 11:30 P. M., arriving next morning in the heart of Louisville at 6:50 A. M. Berths, ready for occupancy at 9 P. M„ are extra long; windows both upper and lower... exreflmj ventilation air smokeless and dnderteas! Spacious washroom, scrupulous cleanliness. INTERSTATE limited train aarvice to LraMb indodea 8 fast trains daily. For advance seat waenratkm. phone RBey 4SOL INDIANA RAILROAD SYSTEM
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'ASK MORTGAGE ON T. H„ I. & E. BE FORECLOSED Suit Filed by Trustees Forecasts Sale of Traction Line. Suit asking foreclosure of a mortgage on properties of the T. H.. I. <Ss E. Traction Company, a, step forecasting a sale of the line, was filed in superior court five Monday by the Fidelity-Philadelphla Trust Company of Philadelphia, trustees under a mortgage agreement. In addition to asking mortgage foreclosures the suit, involving $6,500,000 in bonds guaranteed by the mortgage, asks that the mortgage be declared a prior lien on all the company’s holdings. The mortgage, according to the suit, w’as executed April 28, 1910, guaranteeing the bonds, $1,684,000 of which are held by the plaintiff as trustee. The balance of $4,816,000 is held by bond owners. According to attorneys, the trust company’s suit will be joined with the suit of the Consolidated Collieries Company, against the traction line, under which Elmer W Stout was appointed receiver for the traction company. The mortgage covers interurban and street railway lines, power stations, substations and transmission lines in Marion, Hendricks, Putnam, Clay, Vigo, Sullivan, Knox, Greene, Owen. Morgan, Monroe, Lawrence. Orange, Hamilton, Boone, Clinton. Tippecanoe, Montgomery, Fountain, Warren. Vermillion, Hancock. Henry, Wajme and Fayette counties AGING LEO TAKES REST 20-Year-Old Moving Picture Lion Picks Zoo for Vacation. PHILADELPHIA, March 10.—Leo the 20-year-old moving picture lion weary from a three-year tour around the world, rested today in the Philadelphia zoo. This aged screen character seen by more people than have seen any human actor or actress, will spend a month at the zoo resting and eating.
