Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 19, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1931 — Page 8

PAGE 8

A Day's Menu Breakfast — Sliced fresh pineapple, cereal, cream, eggs poached in milk, on toast, milk, coffee. mm* Luncheon — Clear'soup, toasted crackers, spinach salad, rice custard pudding, milk, tea. m .mi m Dinner — Baked halibut, baked new potatoes, string bean and carrot salad, old-fashioned strawberry shortcake, milk, coffee.

Study Club to Hold Annual June Luncheon Heyl Study Club will hold its annual June luncheon meeting, marking the close of the season, today at the Whispering Winds. Mrs. George B. Elliott is chairman of the committee of hostesses, assisted by Mrs. Verne B. Sharritts and Mrs. Harold Pennicke. The table will be decorated with pink roses, club flower, and small metal animals will be given as favors. Covers will be laid for twenty-flve. The president, Mrs. James L. Beatty, will preside. Mrs. Elizabeth Blackmore will speak, and musical numbers will be given by Mrs. S. Charles Copeland, soloist, accompanied by Mrs. J. A. Matthews. Betty Vollmer Is Hostess to Miss O’Brien Miss Betty Vollmer entertained Monday night at her home, 834 Tacoma street, with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Marietta O’Brieh, whose marriage to Robert Vollmer will take place Wednesday, June 10. The bride’s colors, pink and white, were used in appointments, and in garden flowers that decorated the house and tables at serving time. The hostess was assisted by her mother, Mrs. H. J. Vollmer. Guests included. Mesdames Della O'Brien, the bride's mother. H. E. Smith. Crawfordsvllle; Charles Goff. Thomas Devine. John Sehrt. Margaret Carson. George Harper. Fred Whale. C. J. Burge. Misses Alice and Beth O'Brien. Alice Morgan. Betty Clegg. Nellie O’Connor. Mildred Gallagher, Genevieve Gill and Dolly Hues. PI BETA PHI CLUB IS SPONSORING PLAY Indiana Gamma Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi is sponsoring the presentation of “That’s Gratitude” at English’s theater this week, by the Arthur Casey Players. Patronesses of the project are: Mesdames Edward J. Kirkpatrick, Norman Green. Robert F. Fitzgerald. Ralph Bockstahler. Robert Mannfeld, Elizabeth gpringer Puett, Walter C. Hlser. Misses Elizabeth Ohr and Nadyne Cook. Tickets may be obtained from any of the above, or any member of the club. Board Meeting Set Board of management of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association will hold monthly meeting at 10:30 Thursday morning, at the nursery home, 542 Lockerbie street. Mrs. R. A. Dennis will preside.

NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK

Miss Alice McLaughlin, Sturgis, Mich., and Robert McLaughlin, Detroit, spent the week-end in Indianapolis at the Spink-Arms, visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller and

Card Parties

Mothers’ Club of English Avenue Boys Club will give a luncheon and card party at 12:15 Wednesday at the Foodcraft shop. 230 Century building. Mrs. Otto Hosmann is in charge. Cosmos Sisters, Indiana lodge, No. 2, will give a card party at 2:30 Wednesday at Castle Hall, 230 East Ohio street. St. Mary's Social Club will entertain with cards and lotto Thursday afternoon in the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street. Hostesses will be Mesdames Anna Kemp, Gadena Keen, Fred Klump and Henry Knue. MRS. BRYANT HOST AT BRIDGE PARTY Mrs. Arthur Bryant entertained today at her home, 2208 Park avenue, with a luncheon bridge party honoring Mrs. H. G. Munro, who will leave the city to make her residence in Sherbrook, Canada. Roses and garden flowers decorated the house and luncheon table. Guests were Mesdames R. B. Mcllhaney, D. A. McNamara, Robert Dwyer, A. F. Borchett, L. W. Lapinska and O. C. Haug. Gives Dinner Dance Stafford L. Lambert, St. Louis, entertained a few friends at dinner, followed by dancing, at the Country Club of Indianapolis Sunday night. Lambert, with Herbert Douglas Condie Jr., also of St. Louis, spent the week-end in Indianapolis and attended the race. Luncheon Scheduled Major Robert Anderson W. R. C. No. 44, will hold a covered dish luncheon this noon at Ft. Friendly. Guests will be Mrs. Kate Taylor, department president; Mrs. Martha Givens, department secretary, and Mrs. Vera Turney, department treasurer. Initiation will follow luncheon. Mrs. Flora Hayes ia president. Lions' Club to Meet Woman’s Lions’ Club will hold election of officers at the luncheon meeting at 12:15 Wednesday at the Spink-Arms. k

SEA THEME ADDS NOVELTY IN THE HOME

Ocean Idea Is Used in Decorations BY JULIA BLANSHABD NF.A Service Writer NEW YORK, June 2.—You do not have to go down to the sea nowadays to appreciate a touch of the nautical in the home . The smartest thing you can do is to bring the feel of the ocean into interior decorating schemes. Last season bathrooms started this craze. Pishes and sea-weed abound on bathroom walls. Sponges, soap, towels, bath curtains and even the containers for lotions and unguents have taken on fishy shapes and ocean color schemes and motifs. This year the sea theme is sung with even more gusto and completeness. Prom whole rooms to single ornaments anything that has to do with the sea itself, or ships that sail the sea, is considered the last word in decoration. Even in Wall Paper Mantels now sport all types of miniature models of old schooners, fishing smacks, private yachts or other craft, instead of the coaches they bore last year. Wall samplers use sea schemes in place of the old-time fireplace and easy-chair scenes. New wall papers in modem design sprinkle tiny boats of silver or gold against a blackground of delectable colors. Some of the new breakfast and tea china has square shapes aift. sea scenes for decoration. Crystal ships now are made to hold flowers, or for decorative centerpieces. Even some of the new damask has tiny sailboats woven in satin, and tea towels for the June bride have blue, green, yellow and rustcolored junks printed on their borders. Playrooms, which are on the up and up In the American home right now, are beginning to take on the aspect of ships’ cabins. Ships for Boys’ Rooms Boys’ rooms and guest rooms also are done in surprising ship-shape manner, with bunks for beds, often one above the other in regulation style. It saves space. It adds a gusto to hospitality. It delights the heart and stimulates the imagination of young America to live on land as if on sea. For these rooms there are quite complete interior decorating schemes available. The bunks, to be sure, must be built by the home carpenter. But for the floor, there are now rugs and linoleums in compass and zodiac designs. Maps of all kinds can be had to decorate the walls. Globes are considered one of the nicest things you can give for a present. New fabrics for drapes and for bed covers make a fetish of nautical designs. Lamps Add Touch To complete a scene already seaworthy, or to add a nice touch to any room occupied by one who has sailed the ocean blue, there are now many lamps that reflect the travelers’ passion for the ocean. They use mooring bitts. propellers, steering wheels and other actual stock parts of boats for standards and bases; they incorporate authentic nautical gadgets in the designs on the shades. Among the most attractive of the lamps are a brass steering wheel, mounted on a seasoned oak base, with a light orange parchment shade decorated with wheels and rope painted in gold and brown; a brass propeller and propeller shaft with white parchment shade trimmed with brass pulleys and green cotton rope and a regulation Tim ship’s’' lantern with a white glass globe.

Miss Mon'ta Miller, 2948 College ave£ue, .and Miss Margaret Mullally, *.618 North Capitol avenue, left Monday for a motor trip to the Pacific coast by way of Yellowstone National park. They will tour the west and return in the late autumn. Mrs. C. C. Henry, Los Angeles, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Leo K. FesJer, and Mr. Fesler, 2101 North Pennsylvania street. Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Hays and Mrs. Hays’ mother, Mrs. William P. Herron, Crawfordsville, spent Monday in Indianapolis, en route to French Lick, where Hay s will be one of the speakers at the Governors’ conference. Leonard Soloman and Saul Soloman are in Chicago registered at Edgewater Beach hotel. Mrs. Alice Baxter Mitchell, 145 East Nineteenth street, will leave Wednesday for Kansas City. Mo., to give “St. Joan of Arc.” a dramatical recital in the Congress room of the Hotel? President. She will go on to San Francisco and Santa Barbara, Cal., also to give the recital. Mrs. Grace C. Buschmann, 4650 North Meridian street, has returned from Chicago, where she studied contract bridge under Ely Culbertson and Milton C. Work. She was awarded a trophy for winning pairs in a duplicate contract pair match, with Mrs. Charlotte Cotton Davis. Cleveland, as her partner. She will resume her classes here this week. Mrs. Joseph W. York, Ft. Wayne, is here visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Wagoner, 5910 East Washington street. Mrs. F. J. A. Sullivan. 1733 North Meridian street, is snending two weeks in Huntington, W. Va. Mrs. M. D. Didway. 2021 North Alabama street, and Mrs. T. William Engle, 462 North State street, will go to Liberty Friday tp give a program of readings and songs for the Liberty Literary Club. METHODIST SENIOR NURSES HONORED Nurses of the senior class at the Methodist hospital were honored by alumnae at a gypsy dinner dance Monday night in the Chateau room of the Claypool. Gypsy costumes were worn by the gueste, and gypsy music was a feature of the entertainer. Miss M”7 Fiora was in charge of the dinner arrangements. Mrs. Maude Ash is president of the graduating class, and Miss Erma Lowe is president of the a , ’ rr r'*\ Commencement exercises will be held Wednesday afternoon in the Jacob E. Wile nurses home

Whafs in Fashion?

Corsets Light—Dresses Fit Directed By AMOS PARRISH

Feather-Light, But Effective Summer Corsets Left—An all-in-one of triple net, seamed to fit the figure and reinforced to mold it. Right—A girdle of openwork mesh and openwork elastic, cut to define the waistline and restrain the hips.

NEW YORK, June 2.—“lf the shoe fits,” so goes the old saying, “put it on.” And you might add, “If the new summer dress doesn’t fit, put on anew summer corset.” Corsets in the summer time? Certainly! With thinner summer costumes, it’s even more necessary to keep the body lines free of wrinkles and bumps. And the 1931 summer corsets being what they are, there’s no point in even thinking they might be uncomfortable. How could two or three layers of net be too warm? Or an openwork, meshy fabric, almost as open-

Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

SINCE Mother’s day, which was ushered in with the usual bursts of sentimental oratory. I have taken a newspaper inventory of the sermons for the day in various sections of the land. They are all practically the same —they all put special stress on what mothers owe their children. Hearken to a few things the clergy said: “A mother must love her job.” “A mother must create a home.” “A mother must remain her children’s ideal.” “A mother must expect to work more than eight hours a day.” "A mother must be temperate and religious. She must love wisely and be patient and long suffering and hate evil in all its forms. She must pray ceaselessly and work constantly for her family’s good.” “A mother must not expect any reward for labors.” There you are. A mother must, in other words, be a sort of superhuman creature, meek as a martyr, noble as a saint, pure as an angel and industrious as a beaver. u a tt THESE virtues are commendable, of course. But is it ever possible to find them combined in one individual? And if such a person actually existed, how much consideration would she get at the hands of the average family? You know. She would be left pining at the fireside. I, for one, see red when I listen to this reiteration of the idea that mothers should have no reward save love. Why shouldn’t they? It’s a sappy argument, that the finest, noblest, and most important work in the world should go unrewarded by material pay. Even that might be bearable, however, if we were permitted a few human frailties. It’s this insistence upon our superiority to the rest of the race that irks us. The sort of woman we talk about on Mother’s day would be so,good that she’d die too young to have children.

ON PROGRAM

' • v>' w '-w \V :/'■ .... * -o* i Mlill Ip? l B

Miss Leah Whaley Among the entertainers who will perform for the Governors’ and their wives at the Governors’ conference in French Lick this week, will be Miss Leah Wahley, dancer. She is a pupil of Louise Powell*

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

work as your smart mesh stockings? How could a garment of smooth, sleek linen feel heavy? Or a trifle of almost sheer batiste or voile? They’re Not Too Warm Os course they couldn’t. Right here somebody’s sure to ask, “But what good can such thin materials do the figure? I might as well wear nothing. Naturally we can’t give away the secrets of corset designers and make charts of just how cleverly these materials are cut and seamed and combined with lightweight, porous elastic to get hold of recalcitrant flesh and make it behave. Besides, the proof of the comfort and efficiency of summer corsets is in the wearing. Light as Feather If you insist, try on anew summer dress without a corset. Then pu*t it on over the right foundation. (The corset fitter in your favorite store will tell you which is the right foundation for you.) But first, before you try it on, we’d suggest that you take the summer girdle or all-in-one in your hands and feel and weigh it. Fea-ther-light—almost—isn’t it? A bare two or three ounces, maybe. Soft and pliable, too. Maybe it doesn’t feel as though it would be very effective. But examine how it’s made. See those double and triple rows of stitching at certain points the same important points where heavier winter corsets are reinforced. Elastic Inserts Help They give the thin material enough body to keep that suspicious bulge of flesh going right along the path of smoothness. Notice those little openwork elastic gussets. What are they for? Two things. They allow the garment to give when you move—help make it comfortable. And they exert an almost unnoticeable pressure on that bump of flesh that stuck out when you didn’t have the corset on. Yes, these summer corsets, light and cool as they are, are cut just the way winter ones are. Girdles extend slightly above the waistline so the flesh won’t roll over. All-in-ones are darted and seamed to fit the lines of the figure. Bones Where Needed Very light bones—if you need them—are inserted where you need them. And if you don’t they’re quickly removed. Light summer corsets like these are made for all purposes and all times of day. For sports, regular wear and evening wear. And in these last, backs usually are cut low—as low as your slip and the evening dress that shows your sun-tanned back. Easy to launder, of course, because the materials are just lingerie materials. And when you wear them your dresses look right—you feel comfortable—your skin can breathe properly—and you figure don’t slip from the neat lines your winter corset gave it. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Cool summer sandals are described by Amos Parrish. Mrs. Schock Hostess Mrs. Gus Schock. 2235 Ashland avenue, will be hostess for a covered dish luncheon and meeting of the George H. Chapman, W. R. C. drill team, at noon Thursday. Host to Veterans James E. Wilson, 2625 North Delaware street, was hostess Satur: ay to a meeting of a number of war veterans when they met to form a pest of the National War Veterans Association. The organization has headquarters at St. Joseph, Mo. Pep Club to Meet Miss Mary Jo Flack, 2530 North New Jersey street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Pep Club at 8 Wednesday. Phi Gamma Chi to Meet Phi Gamma Chi sorority will hold its monthly meeting at 8:30 tonight at the home of Miss Delores Millspaugh, 346 North Emerson avenue.

C/outoook shop-isn.PENn.

Club Season Golf Card Announced Columbia Club has announced its golf program for the season. Spring golf tournament will be held June 17 at Avalon Countrj Club course. There will be a smali entry fee, and no greens fee. Luncheon at Avalon is optional. Dinnei will be held at night in the ballroom at the Columbia Club. July 8, an inter-club tournament between the Columbia Club and Indianapolis Athletic Club will be played on Broadmoor Country Club course for the George J. Marott trophy. Luncheon here also will be optional, and a dinner will be held at night at the Athletic Club. July 29, the annual Columbia Club midsummer picnic-golf meet will be held at Ulen Country Club, Lebanon. During August, invitational play will be held either At Martinsville or Shelbyville. Fall championship tournament will be played Sept. 16 at Avalon and dinner will follow at the Columbia Club. Irvington Club Will Meet at Williams Home Irvington Dramatic Club will hold its June meeting Thursday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Williams, 511 North Bolton street. Scenes from "As You Like It” will be presented in the garden, Dr. John Smith Harrison will read the lines which will be acted in pantomime by Mesdames Clifford Wagoner, Arthur Shultz, Noble Ropkey, Miss Virginia Kingsbury, Messrs. Frank Brown, Austin Clifford, Victor Jose, Walter Montgomery, James Loomis, Carl Wagner, Walter Ward, Harold Winslow and Layman Schell. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Korbly are chairmen of the evening. Miss Teany Is \ the Bride of Mr. Alexander * Marriage of Miss Hazel Teany and John Alexander took place at 8 Monday at the home of the bridegroom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Alexander, 615 East Southern avenue. The Rev. Paul Hildebrand read the ceremony before members of the immediate families. The bride was attended by Miss Emma Black, who wore pink lace and carried deep pink roses. Joseph Seigfried was best man. The bride wore a gown of pale blue lace, trimmed in shell pink, and carried pale pink roses. An informal reception followed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander will be at home at 1511 Finley street, after June 6. Ruth Kirby Is Made Bride of Robert Thomas Miss Ruth Kirby, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kirby, Bloomington, and Robert L. Thomas, Indianapolis, were married at 3 Sunday afternoon at the home of the bride’s parents. Miss Dorothy Smith, Cincinnati, niece of the bride, pla3 r ed the piano. The bride wore a gown of poudre blue crepe, and carried pink roses. Mrs. Thomas attended Indiana university, and is a member of Omega Nu Tau sorority. Following a short wedding trip, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas will be a£ home in Indianapolis.

Dorothy Horstman Will Be Feted at Crystal Shower

Misses Mildred and Edna Kritsch, 1518 South Alabama streets, will entertain with a crystal shower in honor of Miss Doro- fi thy Horstman, whose marriage to Paul B. Bullard will take place

CHURCH GROUP TO GIVE 3-ACT PLAY “The Path Across the Hill,” a three-act play by Lillian Mortimer, will be presented by the Calendar section of the Centenary Christian church at 8:15 Friday night at Brookside United Brethren gymnasium, Eleventh and Olney streets. Mrs. Ernest Cooper and William G. Schaeffer have lead roles. A musical program will precede the performance. Other members of the cast are: Mesdames Frank Weis. E. R. Mariotte. Ben. Helkema, Miss Jane Howard, Paul Graybiii. Willard Van Treese and Max Miles. Xi Delta Xi to Meet Beta chapter, Xi Delta Xi sorority, will meet Thursday night at the home of Miss Ruth Boltman, 17 South Arlington avenue. Call Special Session Mineola Council has callled a special meeting of all members for 3 Wednesday night at 1609 Prospect street.

Troubled With Eczema So Gould Not Sleep. Cuticura Healed. “I was troubled with eczema so that I could not sleep. It broke out in pimples and itched so badly that I could not keep my hands from it W hen I scratched it caused eruptions and the trouble spread all over the side of my face. It was so baa that I had to stay home from work, and I was ashamed to see anybody. “I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Grace Clay, 104 Church St, Ferguson, Mo. Soap 2Sc. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 2Sc. Sold everywhere. Sample each free. Address; Cotieara Laboratories, Dept. H, Maldea, Mast.’*

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- _ _ tern No. O 5 2 Size ........• Street City Name •••••••••••••••a*••••••• State

352

CHIC BLOUSE Various points about this charming blouse have been well thought out to give its wearer a youthful appearance. The neckline is flattering, in deep open V, softened by pleated frill. Two types of sleeves are provided. The short sleeves gathered into a narrow band are particularly favored by youth. A snugly fitted yoke secures that important flat slimness through the hips. It’s shown In plaited crepe de chine in opal yellow and brown, so suited for town or resort. Style No. 352 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 1% yard of 39-inch material. Our large fashion magazine shows the latest Paris styles for summer for adults and children. Also instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. MISSION GROUP TO GIVE JAPANESE TEA Woman’s Missionary Society of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church will present a Japanese tea and costume program this afternoon in the church parlors. The program will include music, stories and legends of Japan, and will be in charge of Mrs. E. J. Ellsworth and Mrs. J. P. Laatz. ’

Mrs. Wilbur Johnson Leaves for Her Tour of Europe

Mrs. Wilbur Johnson, 1739 North Pennsylvania street, left today for New York. She will sail Wednesday at midnight on the S. S. Berengaria for a summer tour of Europe. She will escort a group of travelers through England, Holland, Germany, Switzerland, Italy and France. They will celebrate July 4 in Paris, and attend the interna-

Saturday. The hostesses will be Miss Horstman’s bridesmaids. Bridal colors, blossom pink, virgin blue and white, will be used in decorating. At serving time tables will be centered with candles, decorated with Cupids and tied with tulle in the two colors. The gifts will be presented to Miss Hortsman in a wagon decorated with flowers and the colors, drawn by Gerald Glasson, dressed as Cupid. The hostesses will be assisted by Mesdames Harry Glasson, Frank Kritsch and Miss Esther Kritsch. Guests will include: Mesdames John Collins, Robert Elliott, James M. Butler, Clyde Syders, Bessie Blair, Misses Elizabeth Wagner, Mary Jane Strodtman, Emma Mayer, Katheryn Mayer, Barbara Mayer. Margaret Jones, Mary Baggott .Fern Van Voorst, Maxine Hawn. Marget Coyle. Lulu Hitzman, Bertha Rugenstein, Nellis Shea and Anna Kinsley. TRI DELTA CLUB TO GO TO TIPTON Members of Indianapolis chapter of Tri Psi sorority, organization of mothers of Delta Delta Deltas, will go to Tipton Friday to be the luncheon guests of Mrs. W. A. Hill. The committee assisting Mrs. Hill is composed of: Mesdames Frank T. Brown. Frank S. Campbell. A. C. Harvey. J. H. Kennedy. H. L. Kettler. Grace Mackay. John Marshall. D. H. McDevitt. George W. Shugert and O. A. Trinkle.

Governors' Wives Feted at Parties Days in French Lick, while their husbands, or fathers as the case may be, are attending the Governors’ conference, are rounds of pleasure for wives and daughters of these Governors. Mornings may be spent idling around the grounds of the hotel, playing golf or tennis, or perhaps, merely resting for the rigors of the day. Luncheons and bridge parties are held in the afternoon, and dinners and entertainment planned for the evenings. All are charmed with the efforts being made to make their visit in Indiana an agreeable holiday. Tea at the home of Mrs. Thomas D. Taggart will be a feature of today’s entertainment, following luncheon at 1 at the hotel, and tonight a party in Japanese garden will follow the Governors’ informal dinner. Delegation to Visit Quarries Wednesday at 10:30 Governors’ and conference guests will leave on a special train for Bedford and Bloomington to visit largest quarries in the world producing Oolitic limestone, from which many state and federal buildings are constructed. Luncheon will be served on dining cars. Informal dinner will be served at 7 at the hotel, and at 9, a carnival dance will conclude the conference. Monday, following luncheon at the golf club attended by more than sixty persons, Monte Carlo whist was played, and the guests of honor received a variety of prizes, all, with the exception of mirrors and silverware, having been made in the state. Mrs. Gaylord Morton, whose husband is Governor Harry G. Leslie’s secretary, was in charge of arrangements. On the program Monday night were Strickland Gilliland, George Ade, John T. McCutcheon, Meredith Nicholson, William Herschell, Will Hays and Booth Tarkington Jameson. Many Hosts at French Lick Among the Governors and parties in French Lick for the sessions, who were not entertained in Indianapolis over the week-end are: Governor Gifford Pinchot and Mrs. Pinchot, Pennsylvania 1 ; Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt and Mrs. Roosevelt, New York: Governor Harvey Parnell and Mrs. Parnell. Arkansas: Governor Norman S. Case and Mrs. Case. Rhode Island; Governor Stanley C. Wilson and Mrs. Wilson, Vermont: Governor William T. Gardner and Mrs. Gardner. Maine: Governor Wilbur M. Brucker and Mrs. Brucker. Michigan: Governor John G. Winant and Mrs. Wlnant. New Hampshire. Hostesses in French Lick include: Mesdames Fred S. tumell, Richard Lieber, Byron Huff. Jess L. Murden. John C. Ruckelshaus. J. M. Studebaker, Frank Mayr Jr., Henry W. Marshall. James E. P. Holland. John C. Millspaugh. Morton. Edward C. Toner, Charles B. Enlow. Albert J. Wedeking and Miss Lucy Taggart. Miss Dorothy Cunningham is general chairman.

Catherine Hoffman Is Guest of Honor at Bridge Shower

Mrs. Harry McClelland entertained with a luncheon bridge party and kitchen shower today at her home, 322 East Thirty-seventh street, in honor of Miss Catherine Hoffman, whose marriage to Harold B. Metcalf will take place Saturday. Luncheon was served at bridge tables in the living room, which were centered with lighted tapers

tion exposition now in progress just outside the French capital. Those in Mrs. Johnson’s party are: Mrs. James Preston Smith, 1310 North New Jersey street, and niece, Miss Mary Salome Pfleeger, Mishawaka; Mesdames Charles P. Lesh, Frank LaFoe Link, Sue M. Fishback, and Mrs. L. A. G. Shoaff, Paris, 111. Mrs. Johnson’s daughter, Miss Joan Pratt Johnson, will sail late in June with another party who will meet Mrs. Johnson in Europe for* a tour of the Scandinavian countries, including Norway, Denmark and Sweden, the North Cape and the land of the midnight sun. A group of friends from Philadelphia are included in the party. Others leaving this month for Europe are Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hilgenberg, Miss Elizabeth Parrish, Miss Alice Evans, Roland L. Meyer, Edward Schurmann and Edward Wilson, Indianapolis; Misses Dade B. Shearer and Lillian Southard, Greencastle; Miss Helen Polk and Miss Lotta Thomas, Vincennes.

whom ? . - TTshould be a danger signal to e’very purchaser of sanitary protec- fffllt \ , don ! They cannot be true. '

THE words "just like Kotex” should be a danger signal to every purchaser of sanitary protection ! They cannot be true. A pad, to be like Kotex, would have to be made in the Kotex factory. Unique, patented machinery makes Kotex from start to finish. Hands never touch it. Rigid cleanliness prevails. Materials used are superior, made especially for Kotex. The only way to make a pad like Kotex is to make Kotex. Take no chances. Specify genu-

.JUNE 2, 1981

Daily Recipe POTATOES LAURETTE Put 2 tablespoons shortening in saucepan, add hi cup boiling water and when boiling point is reached remove from the Are and add % cup bread flour all at once. Stir until mixture forms a smooth, firm ball. Add 1 egg, unbeaten, and beat until thoroughly mixed. Then add 1 cup riced potato, H teaspoon salt and pinch of pepper. Shape in small cylinders 2% inches long and roll in flour. Pry in deep fat that registers 300 degrees F. and drain on soft crumpled paper. •—Alice Bradley In Woman’* Home Companion.

Beta Society Will Hold Its Last Meeting Last meeting of Beta Delphian Society will be a picnic Thursday at the home of Mrs. William Baum in Williams creek estates. Luncheon will be served in the garden at noon, and will be followed by a varied program. Each member will represent, by her costume some author studied during the year. Mrs. Baum will be assisted by the following retiring officers of' the club: Mesdames Floyd Williamson, Albert Alexander, Charles Warfel. Herbert Akers, Cyril Ober, John May, Max Dahl and Albert C. Hirschman. Guest Bridge to Be Held at Avalon Club Woman’s bridge section of Avalon Country Club will hold a guest bridge party Thursday at the new clubhouse. Luncheon will be served at 1, and a bonus of 250 points will be given those who are on time. Mrs. J. P. Johnson, Mrs. H. Y. Tinch and Mrs. A. D. Heath will be hostesses, and Mrs. W. L. Hoyer is reservation chairman. Members may entertain as many guests as they wish. Mu Phis to Meet Mrs. Irma Bertermann Brandt, 1810 Talbott avenue, will be hostess for the annual luncheon and business meeting of Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, at 12:30 Wednesday. Reports of committees and installation of new officers will follow the luncheon.

in flower clusters. On the dining room table was a miniature bridal party, around an altar, formed by greenery, white roses and daisies, under which the gifts were concealed. Guests with the bride-elect and her mother, Mrs. J. Clyde Hoffman, were: Mesdames Charles Rose. Ed Hunt. Edwin Hurd. H. G. Woodbury. G. J. Boolcwalter. Harry L. Foreman; Misses Amy Beatty. Jeanette Grubb. Sarah EUa Hill and Mary Bowers. Mrs. Rose will entertain Thursday at her home, 308 West Maple road, with a party in honor of Mis* Hoffman. Monday Mrs. Charles Taylor was hostess for a luncheon bridge party at the Ethelenn tearoom. BUSINESS CLUBS TO HOLD COUNCIL Board of the Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs will meet June 20 at the Claypool. A council meeting will be held Sunday, June 21, also at the hotel. Committee chairmen will be elected, and the general work for next year outlined at the Saturday meeting. District chairmen will be appointed afc-'thfe council meeting. Sorority to Meet Sigma Alpha lota, national musical sorority, will be entertained tonight at a picnic supper at the home of Mrs. Louis Bercowitz, 801 College avenue, Bloomington. The la6t luncheon meeting of the year was held at noon Monday at Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music.

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