Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1931 — Page 8
PAGE 8
RED, WHITE, AND BLUE COSTUME IN VOGUE FOR FOURTH
Belt, Shoes Give Bright Color Touch BY JOAN SAVOY NEA Service Writer The Fourth of July is an excellent time to wave the good old red, white, and blue color scheme and cash in on its chic value. Os course you start with a white frock, or a white one touched up with either red or blue. Then you can add the other color in accessory touches and there you are, not only patriotic, but a 100 per cent fashionable American. Some of the new white bathing suits will stand polka dotted red and white beach sandals and umbrella and a polka dotted blue and white Jacket or coat. Or you may be better off, so far as chic is concerned, if you merely add a leather belt half red, half blue. Or you may go very flamboyant in your color scheme and use a coat of solid color such as red, and your hat and shoes blue. Two very smart patriotic costumes, showm here, start life as two-piece frocks. One, a very nifty one indeed, and ideal for a holiday outing on land or sea, is made of ■wide wale white pique and tailored to use the striped design of the goods itself for a decorative effect. The stripes of the weave go this way and that, with the square neck outlined in pointed scallops and the front of the blouse finished in similar manner. Both blue and white, and red and white linen add their touches, the former for the belt, the latter for the scarf. The hat, if one is worn, should be white, banded in both kinds of polka-dotted linen. The second outfit is neat and chic, a two-piece white flat crepe with bands of blue and red outlining the round neck, short sleeves, the belt and a simulated bolero on the waist. Smart looking and tailored, it waves its colors in quite original manner and chalks up for itself a reputation for individuality. Miss Dickerson, Bride-Elect, Is Given Shower Miss Betty Ramey, 5636 Washington boulevard, entertained Wednesday with a bridge party and shower in honor of Miss Harriett Dickerson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Byram Dickerson, whose marriage to C. Hollis Hull, Connersville, will take place Aug. 26. Assisting the hostess were her mother, Mrs. G. L. Ramey; her sister, Miss Margaret Ramey, and Miss Ruth Dickerson. Garden flowers were arranged about the home, and centered the tables at serving time. Out-of-town guests were Miss Rachel P7ull, Connersville, sister of the bridegroom-elect, and Miss Ruth Heaton, Frankfort.
You Can Fat—a Pound a Day on a Rdljitomach J
Just Do These Two Simple Things —lnches of Fat Melt Away
Here is a quick and easy way to take off a pound a day—four to seven pounds a 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 m glass of water half hour before oreakfast every morning. This reduces moisture-weight instantly. Also cleanses your system of the waste matter and excess toxins that most fat people have, and banishes puffiness and bloat. Then do this about eating. FILL YOUR STOMACH—eat your fill—of lean meats, vegetables like spinach, cauliflower, cabbage, tomatoes, etc., and lots of salads. Eat a lot. Eat all you can hold. Don't go hungry f minute. Cut down on butter, a
Snappy for the Holiday
Tv \
(Frocks from Birke and Birke. New York.) A Pair of Snappy Holiday Costumes
SCHOOL HEADS ARE LUNCHEON GUESTS School principals, superintendents, and supervisors who are attending summer school at Butler university, were entertained at luncheon today by Dean W. L. Richardson and the faculty of the Butler university college of education today at the college, Twenty-third and Alabama streets. Following the luncheon the program was to include an address by H. M. Whistler, instructor in advanced psy.() ’.ogy and geography at the college oi education; and musical numbers by Misses Sarah Olinger and Elizabeth Todd of the music department. Dinner to Be Held Delta Omega sorority will have a dinner meeting at 6:30 tonight at the home of Misses Martha and Mar tine Karns, 3904 Broadway.
sweets and desserts, bread. Eat any; fruit for dessert. That's all you do. Fat seems to melt away. The coarse lines of over- ; weight 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 j results. The Jad Salts clear your system of toxins. ’The diet takes oil iat with food that turns to en-' ergy instead of weight. If you’re tired of being embarrassed by fat, try this way. You'll 1 be glad that you did. •Note particularly—the salts urged purely as a poison-banishing j agent—not as a reducing. The change in food does the work. You can get Jad Salts at any drug store.—Advertisement.
Edith Morgan Entertains at Bridge Party
Miss Edith Morgan entertained this morning with a pajama breakfast bridge party at her home, 3619 North Pennsylvania street. She was assisted by her mother, Mrs. Fred C. Morgan. Decorations and appointments carried out a pastel color scheme. Breakfast tables were centered with garden flowers. Guests included; Mesdames Walter Baker Williams, Philip Cornelius, Theodore Fransen Van Gestel, Evans Rust, Miss Frances Kearby and her house guest, Miss Eleanor Carpenter, . Misses Katharyne, Alline and Mary Elizabeth Driscoll, Virginia Mills, Martha Lee McCreary, Marguerite Diener, Irma Frances Drake, Lucy Link, Frances Haight, Loretta Ross, Mary Lou Thomas and Betty Dean. Million Women to Ask Repeal of Liquor Law By Times Special NEW YORK, July 2.—Signatures of one million w’omen, urging the repeal of the eighteenth amendment, will be presented to congress and President Hoover in a petition, by the Women's Moderation Union, it has been announced by Miss M. Louise Gross, national chairman. The appeal is being made on behalf of mothers, “who feel deeply the responsibility for the 1 welfare of the coming generation,” and have watched with “greatest anxiety the growth of intemperate habits in the country,” said Miss Gross. It is the belief of the organization that as long as national prohibition remains in force, all efforts to make the people of the United States ; sober and temperate will be hope- j leas. Members of the organization feel that characters of men, women and children are being ruined, their health undermined, and their respect for honest w T ork being destroyed. Similar petitions will be circulated at 1932 national political conventions, the chairman said. MRS. JAMESONWILL GIVE CLUB DINNER Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, 1035 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain Saturday with her annual Fourth of July dinner at the Woodstock Country Club. Her guests will be a small group of close friends, j
Daily Recipe TOASTED TUNA FISH SANDWICH 1 Can Tuna Fish 1 Teaspoon Onion (Chopped) 2 Tablespoons Pimento (Chopped) 2 Tablespoons Mayonnaise 12 Slices Bread 4 Tablespoons Butter Cream butter and spread on the slices of bread. Combine all remaining ingredients and blend well. Arrange on slices of bread, put slices together and toast.
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Club to Be Scene of Comic Play Hermia, Helena, Memetrius and Lysander will be brought to life tonight to renew their mad “MidSummer Night’s Dream,” at Meridian Hills Country Club. Civic theater has co-operated with the club in producing the pageant, which will be presented on the club lawn. The stage will be set on a nautral slope on one side of the swimming pool, and the audience will be seated on the other side. Decorations will include quantities of summer flowers and greenery, and unusual lighting effects. Parts of the four lovers will be taken by Miss Edythe McCough, as Hermia; Miss Mary Florence Fletcher, Helena; George Lehman Jr., Lysander, and Thomas Biggins, Demetrius. Titania, the fairy queen, will be played by Miss Maja Brownlee sind Jac Broderick will be Puck. Garrett W. Olds will be the fairy king, while Bottom will be played by Arthur J. Beriault. Theseus and Hippolyta, around whom the plot revolves, will be played by Francis Meunier and Miss Ivy Ann Fuller. Parts of the iron men of Athens will be taken by Miss Vera Coxe, Ralph Copeland, George Binger, J. Paul Clemens and John Thompson. Many dinner parties have been planned to precede the affair. Those who will entertain include: Messrs, and Mesdames Nicholas H. Noyes, Hugh J. Baker. Albert J. W. Wohlgemuth, George M. Weaver. Francis T. Huston, Harry Berry. Evans Woollen. E. E. Allison. Harris P. Whitsel. Frank Sparks. William H. Tennyson. Arthur E. Krick. Roy Sahm. A. D. Hitz. Isaas Woodard. B. F. Kelly. George W. Mahoney. Rex Boyd. Lorin T. Driscoll. A. L. Rice. C. H. Beckett. Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Cunningham, Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Seaton and Dr. and Mrs. J. Kent Leasure.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Time#, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- a ct tern No. 4 O D Size Street City Name State • >♦•***•** •* O#
FLOWERED DIMITY FOR CHILD
A flowered dimity in rose and what a marvelous chic effect it gives this cunning model. Plain rose bindings add smart trim. White dimity collar that terminates in a scarf tie repeats the plain rose for its decorative ends. The skirt circular, and not too full, marks its hipline with diagonal lines as the. smartest adult models do these days. Style No. 436 comas in si - *- 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. In yellow dotted swiss, It Is as pretty as can be w’ith self trim. Printed batiste is cool and practical. Our large Fashion Magazine show : s the latest Paris styles for adults and children. Also modern embroidery and instructive lessons in sewing. Price of book 10 cents. Price of pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. ( jjijp jly % * C* \ ffv\
M. ■ ... . ! MISS ELY HOSTESS FOR BRIDGE PARTY Members of the Women’s Athletic Club wfere entertained Wednesday night at an outdoor bridge party at the home of Miss Yivian Ely, 928 West Thirtieth street. Guests included: MesSarr.es May Guth. Teddy Swanyo. Anna Metzger. Fiara Kinder. Josephine Deitch. Theda Boyd. Misses Margaret Wacker. Marv Haerth. Louise Ely. Emma Gardner. Mary Rudebeck. Miriam Head. Mary Hardesty and Mary 'William. Irvine-Mann Announcement has been made cf the marriage of Miss Ida A. Mann, 5941 College avenue, and Nelson A, Irvine, Logansport. which took place Tuesday night, with the Rev. H. T. Graham officiating.
—WHAT’S IN FASHION?—
Wide-mouthed vacuum jug am paper grill plate
NEW YORK, July 2.—There’s one thing that never seems to go out of fashion. Picnics. From grandpa to the toddlers, the family still enjoys them. Fashions in picnics do change, though. They’re more comfortable than they used to be. More public picnicking places with tables and benches to make eating easier. More devices for keeping the lunch clean and hot . . . or cold More efficient equipment for serving the food in a human manner. Today’s picnic lunches don’t have to consist of sandwiches, pickles and hard-boiled eggs. They’re still good picnic foods, of course. But soups, stews, salads, vegetables and hot chocolate for
Just Every Day Sense
BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
I GROW angrier and angrier as I sit these days at the movies and am regaled with the news reels. During the last six weeks, according to faithful count, not one single program has neglected to, show soldiers, guns, battleships, or military maneuvers of some sort. Entertainments are made hideous by reminding us that in every corner of the earth, from Cape Horn to Copenhagen, the boys are drilling, drilling, drilling. We see the huge battleships So and So demonstrating what a fine retaliation she would make if an enemy vessel sneaked up on her. Munitions are wasted on an unbelievable scale. We see pictures of bombs dropp3d from planes and falling futllsly into the friendly sea. The whole thing is enough to make a thrifty soul turn pessimistic. In spite of all our big talk and our high hopes, this country obviously is in the grasp of the Mailed Fists. tt tt a WHETHER all this stuff is subtle propaganda, I do not know. Probably not. But as an audience of one, I’m announcing that I’m fed up on it. Most of use merely resign ourselves to the inevitable and take militarism for granted, but it’s hardly logical to argue that all this play of belligerency will not bring about disastrous results. The trouble with the pacifists is that they are too pacific. The men who love and honor war shriek its glories to the heavens, while those of us who dream of concord are content with timid expostulation. Surely we are not worthy of peace unless we believe it is a cause more sacred than war, and unless we are willing to shout its blessings abroad. ~j A Day’s Menu j Breakfast — { Sliced apricots, cornbeef ! hash with breakfast rad- ! ishes, bran muffins, milk, I coffee. I•* * i { Luncheon — Shrimp and pea salad, I toasted muffins, baked ap- j j pie dumplings, milk, tea. j | c zt tt | Dinner — j j Black bass baked in j cream, browned sweet po- j tatces, spinach in lemon j sauce, cucumber salad, j vanilla ice cream with ■ raspberry sauce, milk, cos- ! _
More Comfortable Picnics Directed. By AMOS PARRISH
the children can be safely carried from kitchen to picnic place. And the best of it is that with modern equipment practically nothing has to be taken home. We haven’t found any paper knives yet But paper forks and spoons, paper cups and saucers, paper plates, paper tumblers and sauce dishes have been perfected so they are quite as useful as china, glass or silver. There are round plates and square plates that can be had in two or three different sizes. If you want to get fancy, there are divided plates, just like a china grill plate, with three sections for keeping three different articles of food separate. These are large enough to be held safely in the lap if a picnic table isn’t about. There are squatty containers for serving salad, vegetables, apple sauce or anything else that’s in a semi-liquid-semi-solid state. There are platters for cold meat—or the steak or hot dogs you cook at the picnic grounds. Cups come in at least two sizes and so do forks and spoons. And all thes# things are so inexpensive that they can be tossed
PETTIS DRY GOODS CO. , *^__THE_ !a _NE^^_WKK ajiH S^^E aaßi^_[ _ ss _ i EST^LIS_HE^___ H 8155 Bargain Basement Men's Genuine I ” I Broadcloth 68 /XM , Carefully tailored Shirts made of fine quality broadcloth. Attractive shades of blue, green, tan and white. Fast colors. Collar attached style. Breast pocket. Sizes 14 to 17. Regularly SI. tmr ‘ "" Men's Summer Combination Athletic Suits Well made of cool rayon. Pink, peach, blue and green. Sizes 32 to 44. Shirts and Shorts Men’s Novelty Hose Shorts are in attractive Rayon, and cotton and raynovelty patterns. Well j on. Reinforced at points of 15?5% made. Sizes 32 to 46. wear. All sizes. Pair— A ® PETTlS’—basement. Women’s Smart Rollin’s “Run-Stop” Sports Pure Silk Shoes Hosiery SI.OO 55c Strongly constructed of fine linen Irregulars of $1 and $1.50 with bright colorful stripes in all Hosiery. Full fashioned. Recolors andhlue and gold plain col- inforced at points of wear ors. ><ew, clever, comfortable. „ i r XT , , Crepe rubber soles and Cuban Cradle sole. Narrow heels, heels. “T” strap style with Popular bummer shades, buckle. Sizes 3to 8. Sizes to 10. PETTlS’—basement. PETTlS’—basement. 1 - ~""i - ■ Cool Dresses JiS Jlk For the Holidays $ 3’ 99 IflUla new 6 hipment of smart sports IIP PI rocks. Made of cool fabrics; f|l§§Sl k • v \ J&EfejS X pure silks> 2 eor gettes, rayons ; r/w \N jBUT voiles. Every Dress 'was |§Bij||| *.jVi‘ originally made to sell for 55.95 §||||i||| [ l e !• i! and $6.50. Sizes 14 to 20, 38 to * J|is||g|l • : 44 and some stout sizes. Jp *e° °c | | PETTlS'—basement.
into the first convenient trash can when it’s time to go home. Those decorative paper table cloths and napkins that you see m every store’s stationery department make the picnic table (or grass) look more appetizing. And there axe “place squares” of paper, which are not square at all but oblong like the mats in your runner and mat set that you use on your table at home. The vacuum bottle is almost a necessity of the modern picnic. But even more convenient is the vacuum jug . . . the voluminous one with the wide mouth that can hold thick vegetable soups or piping hot stews for the children. There are all sorts of small collapsible picnic stoves that operate on canned heat or on the battery of your automobile or the gas in the gas tank. And they’re convenient if a really substantial meat meal is wanted. And if there’s room in the car, you might like the contraption that folds up like a card table, but opens out with two benches attached to a flat top table. (Copyright. 1931. by Amos Parrish) Clothes for a week end cruise are described by Amos Parrish.
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-JULY 2, 1331
Girl Scouts Will Take 3-Day Hike
A gypsy trail will be followed by fourteen Girl Scouts in camp afi Camp Dellwood, the Scout camp, whon they will leave this afternoon for a three-day hike and camping trip to Turkey Run state park. On arriving at their destination, tents will be pitched, meals planned and cooked, and outdoor recreation enjoyed. Nature study work will occupy the spare time, including tha cataloging of specimens of birds, trees, and flowers. This Is the first excursion of this type undertaken by the Girl Scouts here. Mrs. Charles E. Cole, commissioner, and Mrs. Edward A. Gardner are the gypsy chiefs acting as chaperons. Scouts making the trip are: Gertrude Turner. Betty Calrelaee. Mar* eraret Titus. Betty Ann CllDPinser. Mary El'.en Vovles. Ann McColley. Martha Ann Shock. June Mitchell. Doris TomUnson. Helen Eldridee and Mary Hannay Sailors. Miss Clara Foxworthy will be the unit leader, and junior leaders will be Mary Alice Burch, Jane Crawford and Mildred Jerkins.
