Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1931 — Page 8

PAGE 8

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Bugared cherries, cereal, cream, crisp toast, milk, coffee. nan Luncheon — Jellied vegetable salad, graham bread and cream cheese sandwiches, blackberry shortcake with cream, lemonade. o a a Dinner — Planked salmon with potato marbles and spinach timbales, salad of tomatoes stuffed with celery and cabbage, cantaloupe sherbet, macaroons, milk, coffee.

Luncheon to Be Held for Bride-Elect Mrs. James W. Taylor and Mrs. Charles H. Fenner will entertain with a luncheon bridge party and linen shower today at Mrs. Taylor’s home, 5740 Carrollton avenue, in honor of Miss Jean Peterson, whose marriage to M. Stanley McComas will take place June 25. Bride’s table will be decorated with flowers in the bridal colors, orchid and roses, and lighted by tapers in the same shades. Small luncheon tables also will be centered with pastel flowers. Gifts will be presented the bride-elect in an imported market basket tied with tulle in the bride’s colors. Guests with Miss Peterson and her mother, Mrs. Edward Peterson, will be: Mesdames J. H. Beck, Robert Stearns. Roster Williams. George Bruce. C. Fred Fitchey. Marguerite Hansen. Neil Hinton. Frank Langsenkamp. Joseph Merrlam, Robert Workman. Meda Boggs. Frank Herdman. June Thomas. Frank Wayman. Claude Forbes and Miss Ruth Peterson. ARRANGE SHOWER FOR BRIDE-TO-BE Mrs Russell Stubbs. 17 North Dearborn street, will entertain this afternoon with a bridge and shower in honor of Miss Alma Monninger, whose marriage to Rexford Daubemire will take place the latter part of the' month. Decorations will carry out the blue and pink bridal colors. Guests wdll be: Mesdames Karl Monninger, Cedric Rau, Ruby Ashcraft, Misses Celissta O’Neill, Catherine O’Neill, Gladys Huff and Marie Stegmeier.

Miss Alice Shirk to Be Given Bridal Shower at Party

Miss Alice Shirk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Shirk, ■whose marriage to Robert W. Garten will take place at 3 next Wednesday in McKee chapel at Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will be honor guest at a bridge party and personal shower tonight given by Misses Mary Virginia Clark, Mrs. Wise to Be Hostess at Guest Meeting Mrs Walter W. Wise, 4192 Carrollton avenue, will be hostess for the annual guest meeting of the Indianapolis Current Events Club this afternoon. Spring flowers will be used in decorating. The program will consist of trio numbers by Misses Lora Frances Lackey, Dorothy Lackey, and Lora L. Lackey. Mrs. Fred H. Kr.odel, soloist, will sing, and Mrs. F. A. Symmes will read “Hager," in costume. Miss Lora Lackey, pianist, will accompany Mrs. Knodel and Mrs. Symmes, and Miss Dorothy Lackey, cellist, will play solos. Mrs. R. D. Stober is chairman of arrangements, assisted by Mesdames W. H. Biddlecomb, Emma Peet, E. M. Burkhart and J. W. South. Weds Lieutenant Announcement is nflide of the marriage of Miss Eloise Tarbell, daughter of Mrs. Louise Tarbell, and granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gage E. Tarbell, New York, and Lieutenant Frank T. Folk, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Folk, Yukon, Okla., which took place at 5 Tuesday at the Church of the Advent. Lieutenant Folk and Mrs. Folk are at home at Ft. Benjamin Harrison.

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MARRIAGE SUCCESS HELD TO HINGE ON SEX

Causes of Unhappiness Are Traced BY JANE STAFFORD Science Service Medical Staff Writer PHILADELPHIA, June 11.—The factor that makes for success or failure, happiness or unhappiness in marriage is sex, Dr. Robert L. Dickinson of New York told the American Medical Association meeting here Wednesday. Married couples may quarrel over relatives and in-laws, over money matters, bringing up the children and running the home, but these factors all take second place to lack of harmony in the sex relationship as a cause of marital unhappiness. Dr. Dickinson based his observations and conclusions on the testimony of 1,000 wives as to what is wrong with marriage. This testimony was obtained from the women’s own comments on their married lives, and from Dr. Dickinson’s physical examination of them. As anatomist and surgeon, he is accustomed to getting information directly from the physical makeup, he explained. Studied Good Types “Life reveals itself in anatomical and physiological expression, just as it is written in the face and in the eyes,” he said. The women studied were city dwellers of good family and education, married to professional men of moderate income, each with one or two children. Inability to have children was the reason why onefourth of them consulted a physician. The typical woman had one child at the age of about 26, and wanted more. From these women, Dr. Dickinson obtained stories of intensive personal experience, data of mind, body and emotional life. The question of whether the marriage was satisfactory from the standpoint of the sex relationship was answered “yes” by almost half, “no” by almost half, and “sometimes yes, sometimes no” by the remainder. Fear Is at Root Dr. Dickinson concluded that every woman has the capacity for sex expresison which may develop along serene, creative channels or become thwarted and destructive. Fear is at the root of the woman’s difficulty in entering freely into the life of another person, he said. This fear is the result of some impact on the sex side of life while the woman still was a little girl. The statement of married women of all ages showed that the effects of such impact last forever.

Eleanor Clark, Jerry Carver and Bernice Mull at Miss Mull’s home, 5310 North Delaware street. Appointments will be carried out in the bridal colors, pink and blue. Hostesses will be assisted by Mrs. John Mull Jr. Guests with Miss Clark will be: Misses Martha Shirk, Mary Helen Dunnington. Kathryn Haugh, Florence Behymer, Ina R. Lawrence, Ruth Pahud, Katherine Tinsley, Margaret Walden, Helen Carver, Edith Mae Cash, Lillian Steinmetz, Margaret Gabriel, LOy an Braftord, Marguerite Doriot and Margaret Ensley, Indianapolis; Anne Cooper, Anderson; Henrietta. Smith, Vincennes and Helen Chapman, Pittsburgh, Pa. MISS SCHILLING TO BE PARTY GUEST Mrs. Herman J. Hagist will entertain forty guests tonight at a miscellaneous shower at her home, 25 South Seventeenth street, Beech Grove, in honor of Miss Evelyn Schilling, whose marriage to Eugene Gohmann will take place on June 24. Appointments will carry out the pink and white bridal colors. Gifts will be presented the bride-elect by Mary Jane Hagist, who will be Miss Schilling’s flower girl. The hostess will be assisted by her daughter, Miss Dolores Hagist.

Engagement Announced

Mr. and Mrs. Art Schowengerdt, 131 McKim avenue, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Clara Schowengerdt, to E. Leon Estel, 846 East Morris street. The wedding will take place at 8:30 Saturday, June 20, at the home of

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iss Schowengerdt the bride’s parents.

What’s in Fashion? Colorful Summer Rugs Directed By AMOS PARRISH

New YORK, June 11.—When the winter rugs have gone on their summer vacation to get all refreshed for another season, it’s no time to despair of the bare look of the house nor the fapt that the floors aren't just what you'd like them to be. Certainly nob—with so many finelooking, inexpensive summer rugs waiting to fill in the empty spaces. And "supimer rugs” doesn’t mean Just the porch type rug, either. Those are important for the outdoor living room. But there are summer rugs galore thiat fit just as easily into the indoor living room ensemble and color scheme as do the winter ones . . . and kep it cooLlooking in the bargain. Made of Wool and Fiber These fashionable summer rugs are made of fiber w r ool, or combinations of wool and fiber, and they’re light weight and not such dust collectors as the deeper piled winter rugs. Large floral and geometric designs in, bright colors are favorites for both porch and living room. Orange, red, yellow, green, or blue are combined with black in cheerful, summery looking designs. Thene there are smaller conventional geometric patterns—plaids, blocks, stripes—mostly in two-tone combinations, if your room or porch scheme needs something quieter. Green is a favorite color. Because green is both cool and rest ful. Two shades of green combined

Modernistic Design—Suitable for Porches.

or green with ntural color fiber are pleasant combinations. The oval braided rugs that go so well with Colonial furniture -make fine summertime floor coverings, too, either in large room size or in the smaller scatter sizes. Practical for Porches And they aren’t confined to the regular braided rag rug, either. Braided fiber or grass are found

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For the porch, two-toned fiber or grass rug.

practical for porch use. And the plain center with dark border, as illustrated, goes with anything. Along with the braided rag rugs go the Early American hooked rugs that are another good summer fashion. They’re wool, of course, and though light, stay solidly on the floor. Checkerboard Squares Two new porch rug fashions are different from what you’re used to seeing. One is the grass rug made of squares of two colors sewed together in checkerboard effect. The other is of straw with large modernistic flower patterns that extend over almost the entire rug, the pattern ranging from dark to light shades.

Personals

Mrs. Opal Adams and daughters, Margaret and Mildred; Mrs. Martha Teschan and Mrs. Henry Avon of Massillon, 0., are the guests of Mrs. Adams’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson, 423 East Pratt street. Mrs. Frances Johnson, 5505 Pleasant Run boulevard, will leave Sunday for San Francisco to attend the national convention of Federated Music Clubs, representing the Matinee Musicale. Miss Beth Wilson has returned from Hiram college, Hiram, 0., to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Wilson, 4302 Cornelius avenue. Misses Helen Kreber, Mary Lou Finnegan, Mary Agnes Griffin and Mildred Dietz, Omicron chapter, Chi Sigma sorority, have returned from' the national convention of the sorority in Washington. Mrs. Samuel Lewis Shank and her sister, Miss Clara Gilbert, who are spending a week in Kendallviile, were entertained with a luncheon at the Spink Wawasee hotel at Lake Wawasee. Charles P. Emerson Jr., 3177 North Pennsylvania street, is spending a few days at the Roosevelt. Miss Margaret Mellett, also of Indianapolis, is a guest at the hotel. Mrs. Burton Parrott, 2900 North Meridian street, will return the end of the week from a trip to New York City. Mrs. Maurice Beyer. Spink Arms, is. spending the summer in Arlington, Vt. MIXED KRIDGE WILL BE HtiLD AT CLUB Mixed bridge party will be held tonight in the ballroom at the Hoosier Athletic Club. Mrs. Jack Lyons, hostess, will be assisted by Mesdames J. B. Marsh, B. B. Ochs, John L. Nicholson, Otto Rooe, Howard Muller and Ralph Goodwin. *

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Wool rug in conventional geometric pattern.

Some of the simplest and most useful summer rugs, made of light wool or wool with fiber copy those practical winter rugs with plain center and darker boarder. The color combinations in these can be prac-

Wool and fibre in a block and geometric design

tically the same as your heavier winter rugs, if you plan to keep the same color scheme all summer. Rugs that cover the entire floor are more practical if there are children in the house. But if there aren’t, and your floors are of good wood, well-polished, try the smaller sizes. The gleam of the wood helps the decorative scheme and keeps the cool effect. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) Next: Fashions in cotton blouses are reported by Amos Parrish.

Massachusetts Girl Married to City Man in Worcester

Marriage of Miss Marian N. Butler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Vernon Butler, Worcester, Mass., to Obie J. Smith Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Obie J. Smith, 3552 North Pennsylvania street, was solemnized at 6:30 Wednesday night in All Saints’ Episcopal church in Worcester. The Rev. J. Vernon Butler Jr., Springfield, brother of the bride, officiated. Miss Ruth Butler, Worcester, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. The bridesmaids were Misses Edith Fulton, Indianapolis; Helen Thomp-

Miss Dorothy Dosch Bride of David Wickes in Rites Tonight

Marriage of Miss Dorothy Lucille Dosch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Alton Dosch, 1202 North Oxford street, to David Wickes, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Wickes, will

BRIDE-TO-BE

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Miss Glennie Lucille Stafford

Mr. and Mrs. William Stafford, 1112 Westbrook street, announce the engagement of their daughter, Glennie Lucille, to Harold E. Morse. The wedding will take place June 18 at the Second Friends church. SHOWER WILL BE GIVEN MISS BURKE Mrs. Thomas Griffin will entertain tonight with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower at the Columbia Club in honor of Miss Catherine Burke, whose marriage to John J. Fallon will take place June 20. Bride’s colors, pink and blue, will be used in decorations. Guests will include: Mesdames Marie Coyle, John McCann, Missss Deal Burke, Margaret Burke, Ruth Devire. Margarey Sullivan. Mary Fallon, Dorothy Pluckebaum, Nell Larner, Loretta Schatz, Marie Stone. Mary Murphy. Helen Cahill and Marie Hanley.

Card Parties

Lauter Mothers’ cluo will hold a card party at 8 Saturday in the club room, 1509 West Market street. Comanche council 47 will entertain with a benefit card party at 8:30 Friday night at the Red Men's Hall, Morris and Lee streets. Mrs. Enoch Club Hostess Bon Me Amie Club will meet this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Walter Enoch, 1028 North Colorado avenue. '

Sorority to Honor Miss Matthews Miss Marcella Matthews, whose marriage to Robert Berner will take place June 2, will be honored at a miscellaneous shower to be given this afternoon by the Butler university chapter cf Delta Zeta, at the chapter house, 248 West Forty-third street. Miss Matthews is a member of the sorority, and will be graduated from Butler this year. Berner is a senior at Purdue, and is a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. The tea table will be centered with a plateau of pink rosebuds, the Delta Zeta flower, and lighted with pink tapers tied with blue and green tulle, carrying out the bridal colors, which are a combination of the sorority and fraternity colors of the bride and bridegroom-elect. Besides individual gifts from each of the members, the chapter will present Miss Matthews with three bedroom lamps. Members of the committee in charge are the Misses Betty Wilson, chairman; Ruth Goans, Louese Headrick and Alice Higman. Other members of the chapter who will be present are: Misses Anita Brownlee. Mary Elizabeth Thumma. June Wilson. May Langdon, Zoe McFadden. Willodean Nease. Dorothy Wright. Harriett Jones. Beryl DoUer. Marguerite Bader. Mary Bohnstadt, Frances Brittain. Marjorie Campbell. Harriett Ford. Alleene Green. Dorothy Neptune. Alene McCfmb. Billie McElroy. Helen Riggins, Esther Hutsell, Dorothy Dean, Elizabeth McDougall and Florence Condrey. ALTRUSA CLUB r O NAME CANDIDATES Nominating committees have been named by the board of Altrusa Club to select candidates for offices next year. Report of the committees will be made Friday night, June 19, at a dinner meeting at the Columbia Club. Members of the ticket committees are: White—Misses Jess Bass, chairman; Helen Brown. Mary Dickson. Anna Abell and Dr. Edith Haynes. Blue —Misses Eva Storch, chairman; Eunice Johnson. Mary Bingham. Margaret Karst and Mrs. Itfae Houser. Miss Houser to Be Host Miss Mabel Houser will entertain the Varsity Club at 8 Friday night at her home, 3510 East Twenty-fifth street.

son, Worcester; Marion Tobey, Pittsfield, and Helen Newton, New Haven, Conn. Benjamin Detwiler, New York, was best man. Frederick H. Case, Robert McKee, R. Lawson Daniels, all of Worcester, and Robert Crum, Newark, N. J., were ushers.

Following the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bride’s parents, after which Mr. and Mrs. Smith left for a wedding trip. They will be at home after July 1 at 1 East Thirty-sixth street, Indianapolis.

take place at 8 tonight at the Englewood Christian church. The Rev. O. A. Trinkle will read the ceremony. Palms and ferns, lighted with cathedral candles on either side, will decorate the altar. Music will be by Miss Carol Johnson, accompanied by Miss Grace Creighton, organist. Miss Etoile Baxter, Sellersburg, maid of honor, will wear pink net trimmed in taffeta, and carry pink roses. The bridesmaids, Misses Helen and Hilda Luggin, will wear dresses fashioned alike of yellow and green nst, f'espectively, and will carry pink roses. Barbara Suits, flower girl, will wear white net over green taffeta. Charles Wickes will be the best man, and ushers will be Robert Luggin and Dwight McKinsie. The bride, who will be given in marriage by her father, will wear eggshell chiffon over pink satin, designed with fitted bodice and ankle length flared skirt. She will wear a tulle veil with cap of lace trimmed with orange blossoms, and will carry Bride roses and lilies of the valley. A reception at the home of the bride’s parents will follow the ceremony. After a wedding trip the bridal couple will be at home, June 15, at 1406 North Olney street.

Alpha Thetas to Meet Alpha Theta Chi sorority will meet Monday at the home of its president, Miss Virginia Moore, 827 North Keystone avenue.

WINS DEGREE *

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Miss Virginia Ballweg

WELLESLEY, Mass., June 11— As the fifty third senior class, with traditional pomp and ceremony, leaves the portals of Wellesley college next Monday morning Miss Virginia K. Ballweg, daughter of Mrs. F. W. Ballweg, 2151 North Meridian street, will be among the prominent members of the class announced to win the degree of bachelor of arts with distinction for creditable academic work. Miss Ballweg is one of the most popular seniors in Wellesley social activities.

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pattern No. w I o Size Street City Name State

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CONTRASTING BLOUSE Just the merest hint of femininity of so much importance marks this jaunty little two-piece sports dress. It shows the smart vogue of contrast in separate skirt and blouse. And the blouse has a capelet falling over the front shoulders, affecting sleeves. An inverted plait at either side of the flat peplum gives it a delightful flare. The skirt has stitched plaints released just above the knees. The original, a very practical affair combined navy blue flat crepe silk skirt with white eyelet batiste blouse with blue silk crepe belt. The blouse also would be attractive in white crepe silk with blue dots. Style No. 313 may be had in sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2% yards 35-inch for blouse with yards 39-inch for skirt. 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.

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Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

SOME college professors have finished another research. The American woman, they find, is tired of freedom and wants back her old-fashioned special privileges in the way of courtesy and comfort and coddling. It’s plain that the professors are with her in that. In spite of the fact that a good many men still seem vastly concerned about our present behavior, it’s my opinion that they would be even more disgusted if we want back to Victorianism. I can not bring myself to believe that the modem American man ever could be content with a wife or daughter fashioned like one of those colorless clingingvine females. u St u TODAY’S man wants his women to be interesting, at least. He may not realize this, but it’s a fact. And he would be bored unspeakably if he were set down in a world crowded with languishing Victorian ladies. To assume that the entire trend of behavior and thought will revert to past standards is preposterous. What is happening these days in the minds of women merely is the natural reaction that always follows an excess of anything. Too much freedom' is certain to stir a longing for a few restrictions. And too many restrictions are certain to create a burst of revolutionary behavior. But we are waking to a realization of the true values of life and are beginning faintly to understand that one must have more than liberty to have happiness. There are certain fundamental duties that mortals must recognize or be spiritually lost. Women are conning this lesson. God grant that they soon may learn it

City Girl to Be Bride of W. B. Knotts — \ Engagement of Miss Glen Hanning, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Hanning, 909 East Maple road, to Walker B. Knotts, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Knotts, 3515 North Capitol avenue, will be announced at a tea to be given this afternoon from 2:30 until 5, by Mrs. Hanning in honor of her daughter. The wedding will take place Aug. 31, at North Methodist Episcopal church. Miss Katheryn Jane Allison will be Miss Hanning's maid of honor, and Miss Winifred Mae Allison and Miss Agnes Louise Kalleen will be bridesmaids. Eugene Moore will be Knotts’ best man, and Jerauld McDermott, William F. Hanning, W. True Lewis and Carl Newburg will be ushers. The tea table, at which Misses Allison, Mae Allison and Kallen will preside, will be centered with a plateau of spring flowers, and lighted eggshell tapers. Decorations and appointments will carry out the bride-elect’s colors, turquoise, coral and eggshell. Tea roses, with scrolls carrying the announcement tied with the bridal colors, will be given the guests. Miss Dorothy Behmer will assist in the dining room. Mrs. Hanning will be assisted by Mrs. Alonzo Chapman and Mrs. McDermott. Miss Hanning is a former student of Butler university and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Guests will include the entire Kappa chapter at Butler and: Others to Be Present Other guests will include: Mesdames Charles Byfield. Ray Reynolds. Henry Stlpher. Charles Wade. J. M. Antrim. J. C. Hill. Earl Hervey. C. J. Fuller. Allen Lewis, Ross Mitchell. John Kiueber. Floyde Brown. A. W. Buschmann. Norman Gilman. Jessie Marshall. Rufus Mumford. J. H. Laird. T. E. Root. Will Stone. S. H. Greenburg. Ben Bugbee. Guy McGinnis. John Buttler. J. L. Kalleen. Robert Moore. Elbert Storer. Roy Bair. Carrie Hamme'l. Harvey Kelly. John Kusack. Charles Brandt. Harry Cook. L. L. Green. Robert Waller. A. S. Birchett. Robert Clark. F. G. Laird. J. T. Mcran. C. S. Allen. Lou Green. Doan Sparks. W. W. Allison. James Carvto. H. E. Shimer. R. T. Davis. Walter Duneweg and Fred Hanning of Terre Haute; Parker Dunham of Tipton. R. E. Linsey of Cincinnati. Misses Helen Weyl. Ellen McFadden. Marthalou Scboener. Eleanor Morgan. Myrtle Zaring. Frances Zaring. Thelma Caldwell. Bertha Bretzmsn. Rosemary Bretzman. Charlene Noblltt. Florence Eehymer. Lois Sherrill. Virginia Waller. Nancy Kalleen. Betty Kalleen and Jane Marshall.

Miss Reissner Is Honored at Bridge Party Mrs. Donald Delbrook entertained with a bridge party on Wednesday night in the Fairbanks room of the Columbia Club, in honor of Miss Charlotte Reissner, who will be married to Harrison A. Smitson June 20. Guests were presented with corsages of spring flowers tied with ribbons in the bridal colors, pink and blue. The guests were: Mesdames C. E. Setvenson. Olive Wilson. Harold Mercer. Frank L. Reissner. Carl Queisser, Vincent Ball. Louis He >.sley. Misses Beatrice Moore, Elizabetn De Grief. Eleanor Dunn. Edith Robinson, Sara Frances Downs. Gertrude Delbrook, Susan Delbrook and Gladys Hackleman. Mu Phi Dinner Tonight Kappa chapter, Mu Phi Epsilon sorority, will entertain at a dinner at 6 tonight at Scottish Rite cathedral. Honor guests will include Mesdames Helen Piper Law, Madison, Wis.; Berneice Mozinger, Cincinnati; Misses Charlotte Klein, Washington; Ella Johnson, Dallas, Tex., and Kathryn Carmichael, St. Louis, members of the sorority, here for the convention of American Guild of Organists.

Simple to Lose a Pound of Fat a Day on a Full Stomach

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Do Just These Two Simple Things—Fat Melts Away

Here is a quick and easy way to take off a pound a day—four to seven, pounds every week!—with never a hungry moment. A way any doctor will tell you is safe and sure. This is what you do: Take a teaspoonful ordinary Jad Salts in gUu*> of water half hour before breakfast every morning.* This reduces moisture-weight instantly. Also cleanses your system of the wastt matter and excess toxins that mos( fat people have, and banishes puffiness and bloat. Then do this about eating. FILL YOUR STOMACH—eat your fill—of lean meats, vegetables like spinacn. cauliflower, cabbage, tomatoes, etc., and lots of salads. Eat a lot. Eat all you can hold. Don’t go hungry a minute. Cut down on butter, sweets

.JUNE 11, 1931

Daily Recipe SPINACH TIMBALES 2 pounds spinach 1 teaspoon salt 1-2 teaspoon sugar 1-8 teaspoon pepper b tablespoons lemon juice 3 tQQs (yolks) BOM Wash spinach through many waters and remove coarse stalks and stems. Cook uncovered in water which clings to leaves. Add salt when about half cooked. Drain and chop very fine. Season with lemon juice, sugar and pepper, and add egg yolk well beaten. Turn into buttered individual molds. Place several folds of paper in a pan of hot water and bake in oven for fifteen minutes, taking care that the water surrounding the timbales does not boil. Unmold and serve on plank. Serve Hollandaise sauce In a separate dish.

Graduate s Wedding Set for June 16 Miss Lillian Pierson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chiron C. Pierson, 2703 North Pennsylvania street, has chosen June 16 as the date of her wedding to Eugene Rush Clifford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hadley Clifford, Anderson. The wedding will take place at •10:30 in the new chapel of All Souls Unitarian church. Miss Eloys Meyer will be Miss Pierson’s only attendant and Raymond Baxter. Champaign, 111., will be Clifford's best man. Miss Pierson will be graduated Monday from Butler university, where she is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority Clifford also is a graduate of Butler university and a member of Lambda Chi Alpha. Among the parties to be given for Miss Pierson is a luncheon bridge ad miscellaneous shower for which Mrs. Lynn B. Millikan will be hostess, to be held Saturday at her home, 1304 North Delaware street. Miss Meyer will entertain Sunday night with a buffet supper and bridge party at her home, 102 Blue Ridge road. Miss Katherine Sue Kinnaird, Mrs. E. M. Aikman, and Miss Betty Jeanne Davis entertained last week with a bridge party and kitchen shower in honor of the bride-elect. LUNCHEON HELD BY PHOTO INDORSERS Board members of Indianapolis Indorsers of Photoplays entertained at luncheon today at the Indianapolis Athletic Club in honor of Mrs. J. H. Orndorff and Mrs. W. A Hacker who will leave next week to spend the summer in Europe. Covers were laid for Mesdames Orndorff, Hacker, David Ross, Carl Day, Thomas Demerly, Charles Davidson, James Sproule, Wolf Sussman, E. L. Burnett, John Titus, Lillian Jones, Theodore Wagner and Miss Bernice Orndorff. Call Sorority Session Gamma chapter. Gamma Delta Alpha sorority, will have a called meeting at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Dorothy Spaulding, 817 North Oxford street. All members and pledges are asked to be present.

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INCHES OFF Neck Bust Stomach Hips I

and desserts, bread. Eat any fruit for dessert. That’s all you do. Fat seems to melt away. The coarse lines of overweight give way to the refined ones of slenderness. You lose as much as a pound a day. You feel better than for years. For in this treatment you achieve two important results. The Jad Salts clear your system of toxins. ‘The diet takes off fat with food that turns to energy instead of weight. If you’re tired of being embarrassed by fat, try this way. You'll be glad that you did. You can get Jad Salts at any drug store. •Note particularly—the salts are urged purely as a poison-banishing agent—not as a reducing. The change in food does the work.—Advertisement,