Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed figs, cereal, cream, scrambled eggs, crisp toast, milk, coffee. man Luncheon — Oyster stew, brown bread sandwiches, pineapple shortcake, milk, tea. n n n Dinner — Baked halibut with lemon 6auce, baked potatoes, creamed cauliflower, cucumber and lettuce salad, walnut brittle ice cream, milk, coffee.
City Man to Be Wed at ML Vernon Announcement has been made of the approaching marriage of Miss Myriam Olive Wilson, daughter of Ur. and Mrs. Robert Ernest Wilson, Mt. Vernon, Ind., and Robert Halliday Gough, Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harlan E. Gough, Muncie, which will take place at 6:3) Saturday night at St. John’s Episcopal church, Mt. Vernon. Miss Helen Elliott, Indianapolis, and Miss Mildred Kramer, Evansville, will be bridesmaids, and Mrs. Clinton Maurer, Mt. Vernon, matron of honor. Thomas Coughill, Muncie, will be best man, and John Gough, also of Muncie, groomsman. Miss Wilson is a graduate of Tudor Hall, and Wilson college, Chambersburg, Md., and Gough is a graduate of Indiana university and a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He is a member of the faculty of Technical high school. SIGMA CHI CLUB TO INSTALL HEADS Installation of officers will be held by the Sigma Chi Mothers’ Club at the Butler university chapter house, 714 Berkley road this afternoon. Officers to be installed are: Mesdames J. B. Carr, president; C. M. Kelly, vice-president; P. L. Relssner, secretary; E. R. Everline. treasurer, and W. B. Boyd, board of directors. AUXILIARY GROUP WILL HONOR DEAD Indiana Women’s Auxiliary to the Thirty-eighth division will go to Ft. Benjamin Harrison at 4 Friday afternoon to assist Chaplain Samuel J. Miller in decorating the graves of soldiers buried there. The committee in charge is Mesdames Caroline Bedgood, J. P. Cochrane and Viola Francis. RUSSELL STEVENS WED AT KOKOMO Announcement has been received of the marriage of Mrs. Dorothy Miller Pinnell, Kokomo, and Russell Stevens, Indianapolis, which took place Friday at the home of the bride’s father, F. D. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Stevens will make their home at 5026 Central avenue. Grades to Give Play Lower grades at Tudor Hall school will present June plays and pantomimes at 2:30 Thursday in the gymnasium. Parents and friends are Invited. Bride Tourney Set Alpha Xi group, Zeta Tau Alpha alumnae, will hold its monthly bridge tournament at 8 Wednesday at the home of Miss Hildreth Siefert, 927 Eastern avenue.
Miss Mary Vestal Is Honored by Many at Bridal Shower
Miss Lillian Buchanan and Miss Charlotte Tacoma entertained Monday night at the home of Miss Buchanan, 2424 Churchman avenue, with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Mary Elizabeth Vestal, whose marriage to Earl Chivington will take place next month. Orchid, peach and green, the bridal colors, were used in decorating. Iris and snapdragons were arranged throughout the rooms, with a large umbrella, decorated in the colors, suspended from the ceiling, concealed the gifts. Small parasols in pastel shades were presented as favors. A musical program was given during the
I. U. Student Loan Fund Given Sum by Martinsville Clubs
Bn Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 26. A check for SSO has been received by President William Lowe Bryan of Indiana university from the Second District Federation of Clubs (Martinsville), to be added to the student loan fund for needy students at the state university. This check brings the total amount of student loan funds at I. U. up to
Card Parties
Center Council, 1836, Security Benefit Association, will give a euchre and bunco party at 8:30 topight at the hall, 116% East Maryland street. Circle 5, St. Anthony's Altar Sowill give card parties at 2 and 8:30 Wednesday afternoon and night at the hall, 379 North Warman avenue. Mrs. Michael Healy is chairman of the committee. Ladies of the Indianapolis Saengerbund will give a card party at the hall, 49% South Delaware street, at 2:30 Wednesday afternoon. Youngstown Girl Married Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Snyder, Youngstown, 0., have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss June Snyder, and the Rev. Homer Lindsay, new pastor of the Lutheran church at Cicero.
DESSERTS ARE IMPORTANT PART OF MEALS
Keep Shelf Stocked Up With Fruit BY MRS. PENROSE LYLY Written tor NEA Service Home is where the best dessert is. Most men do believe It, whether their wives are clinging vines or business women. A well-made dessert is part of the meal, not something extra. Desserts have high food value. The sugar in them, for instance, is both a good food and an excellent source of energy. Eggs, milk, butter, flour and fruit do their share in keeping the inner man happy. So the young wife, old-fashioned or modem, might just as well learn the trick of the sleight-of-hand desserts. They can be as delicious as the pies and puddings grandma used to make; they take about one-fifth the time to toss together. That is, if you know how. Here’s how. Order ingredients in advance, keep dessert utensils on a special shelf, follow a time schedule Just as you would in an office, use a little food imagination and don’t feel put upon. You’ll Enjoy Desserts You will enjoy your desserts just as much as the men. Your utensil shelf calls for a fruit knife, a stainless steel egg-beater or one of those new glass jar and metal plunger beaters, a measuring cup, set of assorted mixing bowls, several tart tins, a covered mold and a set of silver cups that fit into the freezing tray of the refrigerator, electric or patented fruit squeezer, a friendly can opener, and several other aids to dispatch in the making of first-rate desesrts in practically no time. You need an accurate clock. A modern electric clock is a splendid investment. It always can be relied upon for catching the 8:15 and for timing the most nervous frosting. Stock Your Shelf Underneath this master of a wellrun house, stack a shelf with ready-to-use or quick-to-make dessert ingredients. Include chocolate and custard pudding in powder form, lemon filling for pies, packages of pie crust mixture that need only a few drops of ice water to do the neatest trick of the week. Then get vanilla and almond extracts, jars of granulated sugar flavored with aromatic lemon or orange peel, others handy with vanilla bean, ground almond or pistachio nuts, snuggling in the sugar ready to flavor and sweeten in one economical gesture. Keep Fruits Handy Also keep peaches, oranges, pears and apricots in bottles of syrup, marrons in bottles, guavas also. The list of fruits preserved in sugar syrup is endless. Don’t forget preserved ginger and figs. They can turn an ordinary dessert into a big event. Plan a week’s desserts and order all other ingredients in advance, as often there is no time for last-min-ute dashes to the grocery in this up-to-the-minute routine. COLONIAL DAMES TO BE GUESTS AT TEA Mrs. Russell Creamer Langdon will entertain at tea Tuesday afternoon, June 2, for members of the National Society of Colonial Dames in the state of Indiana. The tea will be held in the officers’ quarters, 12, Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Preceding the tea, Miss Sophia T. Casey, Washington, regent of the army and navy chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution, will give an illustrated lecture on Indian folk lore.
evening, and the hostesses were assisted by their mothers, Mrs. J. C. Buchanan and Mrs. Katherine Tacoma. Guests were: Mesdaraes Cecil Vestal, mother of the bride-elect. Florence Haugh, Nellie Hanna, Lena Vestal, Dorothy Vestal, Elizabeth Vestal. Lucille Vestal, Earl Butterworth, Ikka Matsumoto, Emma Landborn, Ernest Connor. Julia Berry, Misses Josse Vestal, Myra Wood, .lean Vestal, Katherine Hanna, Vera Todd, Bess Buchanan, Lilian Voyles. Marjorie McDonald, Kaska Tacoma, Louise Boling, and Mary H. Stroup, Bedford, and the following members of Beta chapter, Xi Delta XI sorority, to which the hostesses and the guest of honor belong; Misses Charlotte and Dorothy Swain, Lillian Ball Mildred Woolman. Blanche McDaniel, Ruth Boltman, Clara Schieble and Rosemary Judkins.
$25,633, according to the bursar’s office. The check from the above club increases the value of the loan fund already maintained at the university by this organization up to slsl. Acknowledgment of the gift has been made by President Bryan to Mrs. Claud Cohee, secretary-treas-urer of the second district club. Os the $25,633.60 now being used by needy students of the university, $4,301.28 has been provided by the educational committee of the State Federation of Clubs and by fortytwo of its member organizations over the state. Some of the student loan funds at Indiana university are loaned to needy students without interest, while others carry a small interest rate. Members of the Twelfth district of the Indiana Federation of Clubs have provided the largest single loan fund of this group. Its student loan fund at Indiana university has a value of $556.80. The largest single loan fund, outside of that provided by the Indiana Federation of Clubs, is the one provided by the Applegate estate. This is for $3,915.21. Phi Gamma Tau to Meet Alpha chapter, Phi Gamma Tau sorority, will meet Wednesday night at the Chamber of Commerce*. Miss Beatrice Juleman will present a program.
What’s in Fashion?
Serviceable Tennis Dresses
■Directed By A.MOS PARRISH
NEW YORK, May 26.—A good sendee'. That’s important in tennis. Important in tennis clothes, tqo. Run .. jump ... stretch ... twist. It takes good clothes to stand it. Fashionable tennis clothes can. Cut right—for freedom. Made right—for strength. They look good, too. Look good in action or in rest. With fan pleating and box pleating in skirts. Snugly belted or sashed waistlines. Necklines cut in becoming V’s or ovals or squares. And touches of scalloping, pin-tucking or contrasting color. Fashionable tennis dresses are made of such sturdy materials as washable flat crepe, shantung, silk broadcloth, pique and linen. White, the traditional tennis color, is still the most in fashion. Yellows are important, too, and almost as flattering to browned skins as white is. Sleeveless Dresses Popular Seasoned tennis players insist on | sleeveless dresess. They know there’s nothing so annoying as a shoulder seam that stops your arm swing in the middle. Bruyere has designed a smart tennis dress with adjustable crisscross bands. These bands start at the front of the bodies, cross over in the back and return, forming a belt which fastens in front. This dress can be as snug fitting or as loose as you desire simply by adjusting the belt. It reminds us of little old pinafore aprons with their crossed over bands. A great dress for active sports, as the sketch shows. Divided Skirts Practical The newest kind of tennis dress —and it’s a practical idea, today—is the one with “culotte” skirt. “Culotte” is the French word for breeches, but the skirt doesn’t look like breeches at all. It’s a divided skirt. Not one of those cumberous affairs you see worn at formal horse shows. But a tricky arrangement of panels and seams and fullness and pleats, so that when not in action the skirt looks like any graceful, flared skirt—as you can see in the sketch. It actually is divided in the middle, though. And strenuous players like it. One-Piece Dresses Most tennis dresses are one-piece. Then the top doesn’t part company with the skirt when you get reaching. But lots of them look like two-piece dresses. They have yoke top skirts or shirtwaist bodices that give the effect of the two-piece skirt and blouse costume. Crocheted wool yokes on silk tennis dresses are anew idea this season. So are pockets in the front of the skirt or the waist. Tri-colored striped belts are worn with many of the white tennis dresses. One color or two contrasting colors in soft girdles are new. These girdles sometimes are twisted and looped at one side. Sometimes they are made of two or three two-inch bandings, tied together, knotted at one side, and have their ends fringed. They’re new and interesting, these girdles on tennis dresses, and are always in gay contrasting colors whether used with white or pastel colored dresses. And for players who want the freedom of a sleeveless dress, but who burn easily, there’s anew idea of adjusting a sheer linen or silk scarf under the dress so the top of the shoulders is covered. They’re still free to move, but the tender spot on top is protected. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Amos Parrish reports on men’s swimming suits.
Left, dress with gay sash; right, Bruyere’s adjustable criss-cross dress. TRI DELTAS WILL BE DINNER GUESTS Indianapolis Alliance of Delta Delta Delta will hold a dinner meeting Wednesday night at the Butler university chapter house. 909 Hampton road, when members of the active chapter will be guests. Mrs. Herman Porter is chairman of the committee, in charge, assisted by Mesdames Karl Stout. Charles Harrison, Roger Bsem and William Walker. Reservations for : the dinner should be made with j Mrs. Roland |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
The culotte dress—trousers masquerading as skirt.
: WfMjg
Just Every Day Sense
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
OH, that the psychologists could get together for once! It was comparatively easy to bring up a child before this new science became the vogue. One simply used one’s head, and prayed each night that the grace of God would help. Now, however, most mothers are getting quite addle-pated, what with trying to follow so much excellent-sounding advice that somehow never does mix very well. You know that for years now we’ve been told that the baby must not be bothered. He must be washed and fed and left alone. We were warned about his delicate nervous system and admonished especially about indulgent grandmothers. Rocking was forbidden. Everything pleasant that goes with having a baby has been denied us for years, and many a poor mother has smothered her desire to play and coo with her darling because the fear of psychology instead of the fear of God was in her heart. ana AND now what happens? Well, another world famous one comes along, who has, they say, spent years examining babies from 1 day old and up. And she says that unless you want to wreck your child’s life for good by making him shy and awkward and inferior, you must not leave him to lie quietly in his crib. This indeed is the very worst thing you can do. Listen to the woman; “Don’t leave your few-months-old baby quietly in his bed, and breathe a sigh of relief because he requires so little attention. You’ll be sorry if you do. A child must have relations with others when very young. He must play from the very beginning.” There you are again. You’ll be sorry if you do and you’ll be sorry if you don’t. Sometimes I wonder why we ever abandoned the Scriptures to go gadding off after psychology.
Personals
Miss Ruth L. Holaday, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Holaday, 5527 Carrollton avenue, Mt. Holyoke college student, has been thosen to represent the school m a women’s telegraphic archery meet being held by telegraph all over the country under auspices of the Women’s National Archery Association. She was one of the high scorers in a recent meet at Mt. Holyoke. Mrs. Robert Haines, 1040 North Delaware street, is spending a few days in Louisville.
MISS RUTH HALL FETED AT PARTY Mrs. Raymond Pringle, 608 North Gray street, entertained Friday night at her home with a dinner and bridge party in honor of Miss Ruth Emily Hall, whose marriage to Hugh J. Gallagher will take place Wednesday. Spring flowers formed the centerpiece for the table, and decorations were carried out in the chosen colors of pink and grefli. Guests were: Mesdames Robert Schmutte, Charles Davidson. Misses Martha Garaghan, Kathervne O’Donell. Carmalite Nolan, Alice. Jane, and Helen O’Brine. Josephine Cline, Helen Nolan and Ann McHale. • Miss Bradway Hostess Sigma Phi Delta sorority will meet at 8:30 Wedensday at the home of Miss Eunice Bradway, 230 East Pratt street. Miss Bess Peacock is the newly appointed pledge captain. Clocked Stockings Now that you’re used to seeing very fine narrow clocks in sheer stockings, along comes Paris with a wider design. Instead of the one or two fine lines, these are groups of three, four or more, or in wider , spiral patterns.
Bridge Fete Will Honor Bride-Elect Miss Lilyan Brafford and Miss Dorothy Kohlman will entertain with a bridge 1 party and green kitchen shower tonight at Miss Brafford's home, 616 East Thirtythird street, in honor of Miss Alice Shirk, whose marriage to Robert W. Garten will take place June 17. Bride’s colors, pale green and pink, will be used in appointments, and in flowers that will center the bridge tables at serving time. Hostesses will be assisted by Mrs. D. C. Brafford, Miss Brafford’s mother, and Mrs. A. A. Records, Miss Kohhnan’s aunt. Guesis will include: Misses Martha Shirk .Marguerite Doriot, Katherine TinsJey, Betty Akin, Laura Foy, Marian Schulz, Armen Ashjian, Margaret Gabriel, Edith Mae Cash, Catherine Louden, Elsa Fisher, Lillian Steinmetz, Helen Tolson, Margaret Ensley, Helen Jordan, Helen Chapman .Virginia Ploch, Kathryn Haugh, Geraldine Carver. Florence Behymer, Phyllis Sharp, Betty Ann Nichols, Jean Golding, Irene Haslet and Bernice Mull. Kokomo Girl Is Married to Earl Cranmer ; By Times Special * KOKOMO, Ind., May 26.—Miss Irene Coate, Indianapolis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Coate, north of Kokomo, and Carl C. Cranmer, formerly of Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Cranmer of Summitville, were married in the First Methodist church of Decatur, Ga., Saturday. The Rev. Horace F. Smith, pastor of the church, performed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Cranmer left shortly after the ceremony for Lake North Carolina, for a short honeymoon trip. They will make their home in Decatur, Ga. Mrs. Cranmer was graduated from Indiana university. Mr. Cranmer also wits graduated from Indiana university, being a member of Sigma Delta Chi, journalistic fraternity. He was employed on the Kokomo Dispatch as managing editor. After leaving Kokomp he was with the Indianpaolis Star. Since Nov. 15, hs has been employed in the southern divisional office of the Associated Press at Atlanta, Ga., as feature editor. Butler Senior Class, Sorority Name Heads Miss Florence Renn, 4189 Carrollton avenue, has been appointed per-
manent secretary of 1931 graduating class at Butler university, according to an announcement by Donald Youel, class president. It will be her duty to keep an accurate list of class members and notify them of reunions and meetings in the future. The office of permanent secretary is traditional at Butler and is the
only position which the occupant holds for life.
Miss Helen Weyl, 3920 Guilford avenue, recently was elected president of Butler university chapter, Pi Beta Phi sorority. Other officers are: Misses Mary Lou Mann on, vicepresident; Evelyn McDermit, corresponding secretary; Jane Hadley, recording secretary, and Jean Yates, treasurer.
Miss Weyl
UNIQUE PATTERNS FOR BATH TOWELS No excuse for any one not knowing his —or her —own bath towel. Sets of towel and wash cloth have patterns especially designed for boys, girls and men. Scotty dogs and soldiers are favorite children’s designs. And the man of the house will like chevrons. Sorority to Meet Alpha chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority, will meet at 8:30 Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Esther Hufford, 1032 North Gladstone avenue. Cool Lingerie Mesh fabrics in lingerie promise a cool and comfortable summer. Pin point silk mesh or combinations of solid and mesh silk are being used in vests, panties, one-piece combinations and brassieres. Crisp Blouses Smart Crisper fabrics are growing important in blouses. Taffeta is a favorite. Organdie another. And they’re both fashionable in white and pastel tints. New Home Decorations Avery new note in home decoration is the use of gold in such decorative objects as candlesticks, bowls and plates. It’s best in early English rooms, taking the place of silver or pewter. A Simple Application That Dissolves Blackheads No more squeezing and pinching to get rid of those ugly blackheads. Get a little Calonite powder from any drug store, sprinkle a little on a hot. wet cloth, rub over the blackheads, and in two minutes every blackhead wiU be dissolved away entirely.—Advertisement.
QQtiri&LAlA. Smart clothes on EASY CREDIT I
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- one tern No. Z 9 5 Size Street City Name State
295 ITu/ J I
DAY MODEL Today’s model is charmingly flattering. It includes the soft cowl neckline, but with delightful new deep pointed effect, so entirely slimming. The sleeve frills are dainty. The skirt effects a panel at the front, which gives the figure important height. A discreetly patterned silk made the original in brown and white scheme. Style No. 295 is designed for sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36. 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Navy blue crep. siik is stunning with white crepe used for the inset cowl front and sleeve frills. • Size 36 requires 4 yards 39-inch. Our large Fashion Magazine shows the latest Paris styles for summer for adults and children. Also instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book is 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. MISS FRIEDERICH WILL VISIT SPAIN “Miss Friederich, bride-elect, is guest at two parties,” a headline in The Times Monday, misrepresented a story about Miss Margaret Friederich, who will leave soon for a year in Spain. The story was about entertainments in her honor given by Mrs. Clinton H. Glascock and Miss Edith Allen. The Times regrets this confusion of facts. HIGHLAND ~CUJB TO GIVE DINNER Golf-o-Gram, from Highland, announces a special dinner dance on Saturday night, following the speedway race, as a means of enabling the members to entertain their week-end guests.. The swimming pool also will be open, according to the announcement. Dinner reservations should be made early. St. Louis Girl to Wed By Times Special NOBLESVILLE, Ind, May 26. Mrs. Charles Michel has announced 1 the engagement of her daughter, Miss Miriam Michel, St. Louis, and Robert Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bedford Russell of this city. Money-Back Gland Tonic Restores Vigorous Health We guarantee to restore your pep, vigor, vitality; or we refund every cent That's how sure we are that we have the best gland remedy known. Thousands of tests have proved this to our full satisfaction. Now WITHOUT RISK, you can prove It to yours. Glendage is the last word in modern science. In convenient tablet form. Glendage contains extracts from the glands of healthy animals. The effect is astonishing—almost magical! You feel and look years younger! Your interest in life returns. Vigorous health is necessary for success in all human activity today! Do not confuse Glendage with other so-called gland remedies. It is entirely unlike others—lS A REAL GLAND PRODUCT and carries an UNLIMITED GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK. You owe it to yourself and family to try this new day gland remedy. 30-day treatment, $3, at leading druggists, including the Hook Drug Cos., Liggett’s and Walgreen Drug Stores. Your druggist can easily get it for you. Accept no substitute.—Advertisement.
Miss Renn
Guest Day Observed by Amicitias Guest day will be observed by the Amicitia Club this afternoon, when more than fifty guests will be entertained at tea at the Antlers. Guests of honor will be presidents of the federated clubs in Indianapolis. Mrs. Mildred. Grimes will be the hostess, assisted by Mesdames William Perry, James Carter, E. B. Cracraft and W. J. Wonning. Mrs. Ed G. Smith, president of the club, will preside. Mrs. Ethel Lambert will be in charge of the program. A group of dances will be given by children from the Broderick studio, and other novelty dances by Miss Maxine Lambert and Emmet Randolph. Misses Hyla Doyal and Edith McCouch will give a group of readings and Manford Shelburne, pianist, will play. Mrs. John H. Larison, club parliamentarian, will talk on the club’s charity work. The tea table will be centered with a plateau of garden flowers. Mrs. Smith will preside at the tea table. Each guest will be presented with an American Beauty rose, the club flower. Monday Club Program Given at Guest Tea Guest day was observed by Monday Conversation Club, Monday, with a tea at the Propylaeum, following a Russian program. Piano solos, “Etude Tableau, F| Sharp Minor,” (Rachmaninoff); “Prelude in G Major,” (Rachmaninoff), and “Ride of the Night,” (Medtner) were given by Miss Sarah Elizabeth Miller. An address, "Rasputin,” was given by Mrs. Hilton U. Brown, and vocal solos, "Slumber Song” (Gratchaninoff); “Three Birds,” (Cesar Cui) and “Song of the Volga Boatman” (Drake), were given by Miss Mildred Baumgart. Mrs. Edgar R. Eskew, retiring president, and Mrs. Edwin A. Hunt, new president, presided at the tea table, assisted by Mrs. Seward S. Craig. MISS ATTKISSON WILL BE HONORED Mrs. Robert Clarke, 5203 North Illinois street, will entertain tonight with a bridge party in honor of Miss Marjorie Attkisson, whose marriage to Paul H. Burget will take place ! June 6. The bride-elect is the! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George I L. . Attkisson, 45 West Fall Creek boulevard. Snapdragons and delphinium in shades of blue and yellow will be used in decorating. Sixteen guests will be present. MRS. WHEELER TO BE TEA HOSTESS Mrs. John T. Wheeler, 3951 North Pennsylvania street, has issued invitations for a tea from 3 to 6 Friday, in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Charles M. Wells, Lincoln, Ind., and Mrs. Edward H. Dierks, also of Lincoln, who will arrive in Indianapolis today. Mrs. Dierks will be the house guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hammond, 3258 East Fall Creek boulevard. ARRANGE PARTY FOR CITY COUPLE Mr. and Mrs. Joel Wilmoth and Mr. and Mrs. John Doane Sparks, will entertain with a bridge party tonight at Wilmoth’s home, 15 West Twenty-eighth street, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Walker, who will leave Wednesday for permanent residence in Evansville. Appointments will be carried out in orchid and green. Guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Lugar, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Devaney, Miss Gertrude Wysong and Dr. Robert Brown.
| Wall Paper No Odd Lots or Remnants Panels for Easy Shopping Quantity Insures Low Prices 94c to $1.85 per Room 118 patterns at lc, 394 c and 5c per roll assure a complete selection for every purpose. Room I prices include 10 rolls sidewall, 18* yards border and 6 rolls ceiling. Enough for an average room 9 by 12 by 9 ft. high. BETTER GRADES Home-Makers 1 Supplies For fastidious homemakers . , who desire ouality with Falk-O Paste.. 250 and 40C economy. Compare with on * capers at twice the price. Uiume ZO£ Patching Plaster 20<i and 35^ 5-ROOM HOUSE “ zi P” Waterless Soap 45£ ei e *to Paper Hangers’ cwm.ETE aww-s s 20c. includes Rough Plasters, Varnished Tiles L ttt Me 35 * and the finest Sun-Test WALL PAPER CicAftfcßS double process embossed * Ahao tbeDe”.. .3<*. S sos tSC “Tasco” Sponges 50<* 300 N. Delaware St 140 S. Illinois St. Ft Wayne, Ind. Richmond, Ind. 130 E. Main St 101 Main St. SATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK
.MAY 26, 19S1
Daily Recipe Beat the whites of three eggs until stiff. Add one-third of a cup of sugar, one-fourth teaspoon salt. Add one cup of chopped dates which have been boiled until soft, and put through a sieve. Bake for thirty minutes. In a moderately hot oven. Serve with whipped cream, to which a few chopped nuts have been added.
Parties A re Planned for Miss Payne A number of parties are being planned in honor of Miss Phyliss Mahlon Payne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Payne. 3050 North Meridian street, whose marriage to Theodore Franzen Van Gestel will take place June 6, at the Tabernacle Presbyterian church. Miss Virginia Mills, who wit one of Miss Payne's bridesmaids, is entertaining today at luncheon and bridge at Highland Golf and Country Club. Miss Mary Elizabeth Driscoll, another bridesmaid, and her sister, Miss Alline Driscoll, will be hostesses Thursday night at a party at their home, 3129 North Illinois street, in Miss Payne's honor, and Monday night, Miss Marguerite Diener, also a bridesmaid, will entertain. Miss Mills’ guests today will include: Mesdames Payns, Philip Cornelius, Walter Baker Williams, E. A. Crane, Misses Driscoll, Edith Morgan, Louise Allen, Martha Lee McCreary, Imogene Shea and Diener. Silver and white, the bride-elect’s colors, will be used in appointments
si SPORT SANEXL FOR TENNIS /* A GOLF . . BEACH {V AND STREET “SUNNIES” will be seen on swanky busy feet, on the college campus .... on the tennis court . . at the k I beach. * Try them with your pajamas .„ ImH at home \ lip IN COLORFUL COMBINATIONS Red and White, Khaki, with Black and 5 Orange. IN PLAIN COLOR LINEN White, Blue, Greea, Rose. MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED HVhtrt 9aak.an and Camomy MM West Washmton Str*
