Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1931 — Page 17
MAY 15, 1931.
Clubs Will Hear Talks on Health Public Health Nursing Association met Thursday morning at the home of the president, Mrs. P. R. Kautz, 4059 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Mortimer C. Furscott, chairman of the speakers bureau for child health day, announced that child health talks will be given by the following clubs before May 20: Caravan Club. Elizabeth Stanley chapter. W. c. T. U.: Optimist Club. Exchange Club. Jewsh Council of Women. Cervus Club Giro Club. P. T. A. of St. Joan of school. Advertising Club. Altrusa Club Woman's* Rotary Club. Fortnightly Literary Club Purchasing Agents of Indianapolis. Lions Club and Tree Kindergarten Society at Broofcside community house ar.d Y W. C A. Miss Beatrice Short, superintendent of nurses, in a brief summary of activities of the organization during the last month, reported that blue ribbon awards were made to kindergarten children at a kindergarten association May day meeting. Red ribbons were awarded a week later. Special recognition was given kindergartens whose children all were protected against diphtheria and smallpox. Nathan Morris school was 100 per cent and Ketcham street, 98 per cent. The association nurses also assisted with the celebration of Child Health day at American Settlement. Both cases and visits were less in April than in March, and although there were 304 more cases than in 1930, fewer visits were made.
MRS. BEN HARRIS TO HEAD P. T. A. Mrs. Ben Harris was re-elected president of the Parent-Teacher Association of School 34 at the last meeting of the year Wednesday at the school. Other officers are Mesdames Walter Perdts, first vicepresident; W. p. Blasengym, second vice-president; Claude McConnell, secretary, and Eugene Woerner, treasurer. Reports of committees were given, followed by music by the school orchestra, and a program by the ehilrden in the primary department. MISS MINNICK TO BE BUTLER QUEEN Miss Mary Louise Minnick has been chosen as May Queen for the Butler university festival next Saturday on the campus at Fairview. Her attendants include: Misses Mary Ellen Yarllng. Gladys Hawickhorst. Marv Elisabeth Thumma. Elsie Kllklnson. Betty Dalman. Margaret Harrison. BessaJie Reavls. Bernice Darnell, Genevieve Clark. Wilhelmlna Shirts, Alice Shirk. Muriel Maze. Virginia Hill and Evelyn Hensehen. Novel Picnic Dishes Unbreakable dishes—colorful and delicate-looking, but strong-wearing —are anew idea for the summer home, camp and picnic.
SELLING OUT Our Complete High-Grade Stock of FURNITURE Nothing Reserved — Nothing Held Back! 50-Lb. Cotton and Felt O ■ AC MATTRESS*|= —Covered in good quality art ticking. Regular Price, §§& Jap $12.50. Selling Out Price, only '1 his 4-Ft. Li ■ .rattan ' ; i 50-Lb. Side leer Lawn Bench Refrigerators While they last, selling out _ . _ P rice - Regular $3.95 Value Sale PriC€ $u i *l* *26 sa ■ Sir walls of Insulation to SBB Sturdily built of well seasonad solid keep out the heat and reoak—Complete with chains. tain the cold. Mil ■H— tg—l 111 ■! ' I ■HI’ ■gsasaww Capitol Furniture Cos. 211 East Washington St. A deposit will hold any purchase for future delivery. Trade in your old furniture! Phone for an appraiser to call!
—WHAT’S IN FASHION?—
Cooler-Looking, Feeling Coats
NEW YORK, May 15.—It’s in weather like this that 6ma.rt in-between weight coats prove their worth. The coats that both look and feel cooler, but that still have some warmth when you need it. There are plenty of them. And they give you the well-dressed feeling, without the bundled-up air. They are the coats of light-weight woolens—the wool crepes, the almost sheer nubby weaves; the meshlike, almost openwork tweeds. They’re adaptable fabrics, resisting both heat and cold. And they lie light as a feather on the shoulders. Lots of spring’s most fashionable coats are designed so they not only look cooler, but actually are cooler. In these lighter weight fabrics they make the perfect combination for this in-between time of year. The collarless coat is one good example. There’s just the one thickness of material around the neckline. No collar to roll up in back and rub the neck. One of them has three-quarter
Kappa Alpha Theta Alumnae Will Play in Bridge Tourney
Playoff in the Kappa Alpha Theta alumnae bridge tournament will be held Saturday afternoon at Meridian Hills Country Club. Competing for the grand prize are the following: Mesdames Ha rot a Keallng. Walter Montgomery. Donald LaFure, Harold McCarthy. Emory Baxter. Lawrence Holmes. John Barnett. Coburn Scholl. Lawrence Henderson. Robert Hall. Charles Collins,
Classes Will Present Plays at Tudor Hall Seventh and eighth grades at Tudor Hall school will present three plays at 8 tonight in the auditorium. All have been directed by Miss Charlotte Thompson, dramatics instructor. The cast of one, ‘‘Wee Willie Winkie,” includes: Misses Mary Stewart Kurtz. Alice Emerson. Dorothy Brooks. Joan Metzger. Josephine Mayer. Panice Ball. Betty Bowen and Ardlth Mettenet. In “Master Skylark’’ will be: Misses Joan Metzger. Barbara Hickam. Barbara Stafford. Josephine Mayer. Maude Balke. Ardith Mettenet. Nina Brown. Prudence Ann Brown. Carolyn Stelck Jane Zimmer. Patricia Gilliland. Janice Ball. Betty Bowen and Virginia Balke. “Sawdust,” includes: Misses Kathryn Hadley. Jane Drake. Jane Morgan. Jane Zimmer. Jane Turner. Virginia Balke. Jane Strashun. Marjorie Eunch. Roberta Denham and Betty lee Hoffman.
Directed By AMOS PARRISH sleeves— another fashionable, cool-1 er-lookirg, cooler-feeling detail. Then it's fashionable, too, for a coat to be collar less across the back of the neckline, with a rever on each side of the front to fall like a jabot. The soft folds looks well when the coat is worn partly open, as you often want to wear a coat when the sun is warm. And the back of the neck is still open to the cooling breezes. That the one sketched has sleeves j that are wide at the wrist. Fashionable. And cooler, too. Nothing to rub or bind. And the air can circulate up the sleeve. Another coat that has a cool, j neat, unburdened look is the one with very narrow roll collar. These collars are so small they give almost the same effect as a collarless coat. One way of keeping them cooler and fresher looking is to use a crisp white pique collar over the coat collar. But this extra collar must, of course, be cut exactly the same as the coat collar under it. In midspring weather it’s a comforting thought to know that so 1 many of the most fashionable coats j
Maud Mclntyre, Theodore Locke. Haerle I Rhodehamel. O. D. Lange. Misses Betty McMath. Marjorie Spencer. Betty Lee, Helen DeGrief. Gladys Kaekleman. Edith Robinson, and Frances Smith. Other reservations have been made by: Mesdames Harold Sutherlin, A. D. Hltz. Robert Kelser. James L. Murray. J. W. Atherton. R. E. SpeigeL H. O. Page, L. E. Freeman, George Stewart. M. J. Spencer. E. F. Smith. Walter Krull. Scott Brewer. Walter Shlrlel. Fred Ahrbecker. James Ray. George Hoster. Lawrence Shappert. Harold Burge. Francis Sommers. Stephen Badger. Rtissell Bosart. Anna Carlstedt. i Fred Witherspoon. Misses Virginia Kings- | bury. Helen Wilson and Betty Bertermann. MRS. BROWN WILL SPEAK TO SOCIETY Ushers for the meeting of the Martha Hawkins Society at the First Baptist church tonight will include Mesdames E. R. Besore, chairman; Herbert Bacon, J. B. Carr, E. C. Goshorn and Judson Stark. Mrs. Demarchus Brown will be speaker. A musical program will be given by Vaughn Cornish, baritone. Rushees to Be Dined Alpha Tau chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority, will entertain with a buffet supper for its rushees tonight j at the home of Miss Martha MorIrison, 3519 Graceland avenue.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
are not fur-trimmed. They make you think cooler than a furtrimmed coat does. And the soft, easy-fitting lines of many spring coats are more comfortable, too, than the coats that fit in close, tailored fashion. (Copyright 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Amos Parrish writes on comfortable fashions to wear, in the car.
Jabot Front—Smart with revers that sass like a jabot; cool sleeves wide at the wrist.
KEEP KISSABLE ' • • * - . OLDGOLDS OLD GOLDS were created to give Wk Omm delightful tasting cigarette. - But the makers also considered &M 'in fmßisF They created a pure-tobacco ciga- ■ " • > jfffkffißf rette...free of coriander and M ‘ that burn in, ° c!in 9 in 9' stainin 9Sm | j smoke pure-tobacco OLD GOLDS, fijr ymamk 11 Their dean, sun-ripened, naturalJ" j JF wfm 1 f flavored tobaccos will be like \ honey to your THROAT. And they Open up a pack of old golds and smell Vu mm tobacco. Do the same with any other cigarette. Judge for yourself which has the w dm a favor to your family and friends, as well jJPIIIikBMIF as to yourself, to smoke natural-flavored. OLD GOLDS, NOT A COUGH IN A CARLOAD O F- LerHsrd Cos., Tea NO "ARTIFICIAL FLAVORS" TO TAINT THE BREATH...OR SCRATCH THE THROAT.
Party Will Be Given at Sunnyside Children at Sunnyside sanatarium will hold their May party at 3 Sunday, sponsored by the Children’s Sunshine Club of Sunnyside. Patients will take part in the program. Frances Denny has been named May Queen, and her attendants will include Gloria Wood, Genevieve Martin, and Gertrude Laney. Other girls and boys will I represent Sowers, and will be dressed in costume. Following a Maypole dance and crowning of May Queen, refreshments will be served. Cakes and ice' cream will be in flower molds. Decorations will carry out the same design. Mrs. Frank Coyle is chairman of hostesses and will be assisted by Mesdames Frank Gritt, Harry Grimes, W. S. Lindholm, E. C. Anderson, Harry Kern, Donald Smith and E. A. Kelly. Sorority to Dance Tau Delta Sigma sorority will entertain Saturday night at the Pleasant Run Country Club with its annual spring dance. Music will be provided by Hunter’s Rhythm Kings orchestra. The committee in charge is Mrs. Margaret Caulfield, chairman; Misses Margaret Layton, Dorothy Wright, and Bemeice; Carter. I
' " - Permanent Waves NONE MORE BEAUTIFUL - Do you find it hard to set your own hair? If so get our push-up wave, which is so _ jgg easy to take care of. Just comb the hair iffl iff and push the waves into place. P. A. KRAUSE BEAUX CHEVEUX, $5 FAMOUS SHEEN-OIL S*WS $lO Artistic Permanent Wave Shop RL 8773. 501 ODD FELLOW BLDG.
ENGAGED
JBBBI i
Miss Marjorie Smith
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith. 413 North Bancroft street, have announced the engagement of their daughter Marjorie to Robert Kilgore Smith Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Smith, Oak Park, 111. The marriage will take place Sept. 23. Meeting Is Postponed Meeting of the St. Agnes Alumnae Association, to have been held tonight at the academy, has been postponed indefinitely.
RECENT BRIDE GUEST AT PARTY Miss Ruth Omelvena will entertained Thursday at her home on Kessler boulevard with a supper-
( l’s’&urCK*t T. < * j I W INDSOR! . JEWELBWCOMRMiY | 135 North Illinois St.—Lyric Theater Bldg. * A. I WTO A QDVf'T AT t —Another New Ship- J ♦ £rA 1 A/1 tJiL-J Li/1 L: men* of These Fine ♦ see our Modern 40-Hour 1 Kitchen Clocks i \ // It 12 1 W hOe They Last 98c j I Mr —About 10 inches square— I >H aka Fine guaranteed 40- hour |! Your movements—Green, blue and I li £ ho . ,< '® red enameled finished j| * Jr ' mßt Beautifully decorated. The Nationally Famous Gothic ‘Jar-Proof’ Watches + for ‘Her’ g* I for ‘Him’ f* % —Dainty n® w ‘ aHja I —Sturdy man- ~ models. Com. £E3m I nlth models— , MR A I plot© with bands. I >uUy guaranteed. T f'" N 1 DIAMONDS s w°°tt —Amazing values at... * IIS-Kt. solid white gold ' M mountings, beautifully , Fountain Pen and Pencil and £* F.xpert natch Repairing That if Sets Satisfaction, jjj
PAGE 17
! bridge in honor of Mrs. Chester C. ! Ridge, who was Miss Mary Lou Curran before her marriage. Guests were: Mesdames Donald Sharks. Robert Arser, Frank Langsenkamp Jr.. Rav Holtman. i M.ssas Kathleen HotteU and Martha 1 Thomas.
