Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1931 — Page 6
PAGE 6
FORMAL FROCKS NOW HAVE THE YOUTH OF SPORTS WEAR
New Gowns Are Marvel of Designing BY ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA Service Writer PARIS, July fl.—Undoubtedly the reason why women hesitated so long before abandoning the youthful simplicity of morning styles was their fear that a more complicated cut, longer skirts and other so-called “feminlne’ , details would add to their years. The formal aftemon frock now being an essential number of the summer wardrobe, however, the couturiers have accomplished a near miracle this season by creating at once the most youthful and most feminine of gowns destined for all formal sumrtfer festivities. Slim Silhouette Whether fashioned of georgette, chiffon, lace or crepe de chine, whether in plain colors or gay with floral designs, the new afternoon gowns show the same slim silhouette as the Informal morning or sports suit. Despite the sheerness of some of the fabrics employed there is no unnecessary fullness at the hlpiine in the mast recent models. Skirts are form-fitting to well below the hipline, and width is introduced by godets or pleats. Extreme Femininity The femininity of these dresses is expressed in scalloped hems, berthas and wide, bell sleeves. A chanel flowered chiffon garden party dress, for example, will have its hemline showing a cut-out of the pattern. A dotted mousseline de soie created by Jenny has its hem, neckline and bottom of its sleeves daintily scalloped. Still another attractive model created by Madame Jenny—who always has excelled in this type of afternoon dress—shows a double apron effect on a narrow foundation slip, both edged with a tightly pleated edging of the same fabric. The cap sleeves also are edged with the same edging, and the flatness of the bodice is relieved by three of the frills separated down the middle by a flat t/nd which is made to button with three large nacre buttons.
Accessories Lend Contrast Many of the new afternoon frocks show some sort of jacket, as the majority of women feel more adequately dressed this way. Moreover, they easily can be worn for dinner at a smart open-air restaurant on hot summer evenings, and this is where the wrap, however fragile, is very useful. Black, green, yellow, blue and brown on a white ground, or vice versa, are fashionable color combinations for the printed fabrics. Accessories offer a colorful contrast this season in the form of long gloves and shoes, and usually are of the same color as the hat Black, brown and white are the most fashionable in the order named. Both small and large hats accompany these afternoon frocks, but later on in the season the picture hat is sure to be worn almost exclusively at the fashionable seaside resorts and watering places.
Your Child Nobody Likes Spoiled Child, Don’t Hang Handicap on Him
BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Don’t give a child everything he wants. It is about the crudest thing we can do. Cruel, not because life is a rather average affair, and the law of compensation is bound to be in evidence at some periods in his life, handing him disappointments that he can’t cope with, but because people aren’t going to like him. Nobody likes a spoiled child when he is little. They will like him less when he is big. Nor is it fair by mere weakness on our part and sheer spineless inability to say “no,” to allow him to grow up into a miserable, unhappy being, ruined by his own sense of expectancy. This habit of wanting things and getting them grows. It gets to the point where there is no satiation. What then? I know a family with two children who handed their youngsters the earth with their monograms on it. They were lovely, normal, lovable children when they were little —this boy and girl. I predicted trouble when their mistaken parents insisted on making them receiving stations for everything they could scrape up money to buy. Not only that, but they couldn’t and wouldn’t say “no.” The word “must” was torn out of their dictionary. They were regular “yes" parents. I hadn’t seen either of the children for several years—then I saw them one day this spring. The history of these years was written all over their faces. The boy flung in with an open letter in his hand. He is to go to college in the fall and
A Day’s Menu Breakfast— Cherries, cereal cooked with dates, cream, sour cream waffles, maple sirup, milk, coffee. a t> tt T ,uncheon — Baked spinach and mush* rooms, cheese muffins, radishes, French rice pudding, milk. tea. • a a Dinner — Creole bouillabaise, head lettuce with French dressing, rye bread, strawberry batter pudding, milk, coffee.
SUMMER CHIC MADE EASY BY FLOWERY GOWNS
There are many ways of achieving chic via the summery flowered frock. Quaint charm is seen in the navy blue and white printed frock at left, from Jenny, with the tiny capsleeves, double tunic, and the front of the bodice trimmed with finely pleated ruffles. Alexandrine makes gloves of blue and white to go with it. Jenny uses big light blue polka dots on a white ground for the next afternoon frock, which is topped by a blue sisol hat from Lemonnier.
Altrusa Club Members Hear Music Program Altrusa Club members were entertained with a musical program at their luncheon meeting Friday at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Glenn Downey, pianist, was presented by candidates for election on the white ticket. Blue ticket candidates presented each member with candy fire crackers. The election will be held July 17. Miss Mary Elizabeth Rossell sang a group of songs, accompanied by Miss Nadine Stice,. pianist. Both were graduated in June from Arsenal Technical high school. Misses Rose Dowd pianist, and Mary Frances Terry, violinist, June graduates of St. Agnes Academy, played. The president, Miss Mamie D. Larsh, presided. BUSINESS WOMEN WILL BE GUESTS Marion County Tuberculosis Association will entertain with a tea at 4 Saturday at its nutrition camp, north of Bridgeport. Guests will bC members of the Business and Professional Woman’s Club and their friends. Club members wishing to attend are asked to notify Miss Alma R. Kampe, chairman of the club summer activities committee.
had learned that he couldn’t have a room to himself. “I won’t go a step to the old college!” he shouted. “A fine place you and Dad picked for me! I told you I wouldn’t go.” “Hush, Bob! You ought to be grateful. It’s a splendid school.” “Grateful. I can’t see why I couldn’t have gone some place I wanted to, where they don’t work your head off.” His sister, 15, came in and demanded the car. “I can’t let you take it,” pleaded her mother. “You have no license and your father would be frantic if he thought you’d taken it again after last week. You might have an accident and hit somebody. Please, dear!” She didn’t answer, but over her hard, face there came a look that I rather thought I cpuld translate, and that was verified a minute or two later by a slam and the sound of a starting motor and shifting gears. The girl had taken the car as she had helped herseif to everything else in her life. Some day, since she feels it her divine right to do as she pleases, she’ll drive through a traffic signal and very likely kill somebody. Perhaps herself. And her brother, I’m thinking, will come home at the end of the semester to stay.
HEADS CLUB
ft- ® • s. |S .. J
Miss Margaret Wacker
Miss Margaret Wacker has been elected treasurer of the Women’s Athletic Club, a unit of the Hcosier Athletic Club. Other officers are Miss Emma Gardner, president, ans miss Margaret Rudbeck, secretary.
—WHAT’S IN FASHION?—
NEW YORK, July 6.—What are good clothes for a man to take on his vacation? Motorists and golfers are wearing two-button, notch lapel coats of tweedy materials with plus-four knickers or gray flannel slacks. Usually a plain, slipover, V-neck sweater goes with this outfit —made of lightweight, loosely woven wool in a light color like yellow, green, tan, blue or gray. Hose are usually plain, too, matching the sweater, or at least going with it. Sports Jackets Popular Ocean-going and boardwalkstrolling men wear sports jackets of flannel, tweed, camel’s hair, Shetland or linen with flannel or serge trousers. The jackets are two or three-but-ton, single-breasted ones, with a plain or half-belted and stitched back, patch pockets and notched lapels. ■ The trousers are usually white, with narrow stripes for a second choice and the new allover bird’s eye designs if you want a third. Striped trousefs generally match the blue, gray, brown or tan of the jacket. Light Weights Needed Two-piece linen suits and double or single breasted flannel suits are good for any vacationist to have along. Lightweight worsteds are liked particularly for train travel. At night the most fashionable combination is the blue coat and white trousers. Soft, cool hats and caps are better for vacations than the stiffer kinds. Which means panama hats, lightweight felts, linen and tweed caps that shade the face, can be folded up into the pocket and don’t blow off. Boater straws, though stiff, are good looking, especially with the jauntier outfits. But heavy felts certainly don’t belong in the vacation picture. Foulards and other lightweight silks tell the necktie sory, in small allover patterns of every description and in spaced figures, too. “White-and-** Shoes As for shoes, black-and-white and brown-and-white buck and calf combinations are first choice of vacationing men wherever they are going. All white buckskins with black soles are newer, though. Socks as light as they can get them are what most men take—silk, lisle and featherweight woolens. Plain bright colors, clocks, allover patterns and stripes are the usual order of choice. Pack a pair of tennis shoes if you play—a bathing suit if you swim—and the necessary accessories for whatever is your favorite vacation pastime—and you’re ready from a clothes standpoint for the time of your life. (CoDvrleht. 1931. by Amos Parrish! Next: Amos Parrish writes on the fashion for piqne.
Daily Recipe SALMON WIGGLE 1 lb. can salmon 11-2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup evaporated milk 1 cup liquid from salmon 2 tablespoons salt 1 teaspoon lemon juice Dash cayenne 1 No. 2 can peas Drain salmon, reserving liquid for white sauce. Remove skin and bones from salmon, flake with a fork and season with lemon juice. Prepare a white sauce of the butter, flour, milk, salmon liquid and salt Add the salmon and peas and heat thoroughly. Serve on hot, buttered toast or toasted crackerj.
The formal black and white printed afternoon ensemble from Worth has a reversible black coat lined with the print, and a black picot hat with white velvet crown, from Gaby Mono. Several shades of yellow make tiny nosegays on the black crepe de chine jacket ensemble from Jenny, shown at right. The organdie collar, the Alexandrine gloves and the jersey straw Lemonnier hat all are of chalk white.
Men’s Vacation Clothes Directed By AMOS PARRISH
i ■ ———
Daughters of Constitution to Be Organized Here Wednesday
A group of women, interested in supporting President Herbert Hoover and the Constitution, called together by Mrs. Ovid Butler Jameson, will meet for luncheon at 12:30 Wednesday for the purpose of organizing the “Daughters of the American Constitution.” The organization, Republican in nature, has been directed by Mrs. Louis J. Brooks, St. Louis, who will address the local group Wednesday on “Daughters of the American Constitution.” Mrs. Lon O. Hocker, St. Louis, is national president. Mrs. Jameson is sponsor of the Indianapolis chapter. Other organization sponsors throughout the
Jeanette Boyle Brown to Wed Lieut. Dwight Rosebaum
Miss Jeanette Boyle Brown, daughter of Air. and Airs, Robert A. Brown, St. Joseph, Mo., and Lieutenant Dwight A. Rosebaum, son of Air. and Airs. John O. Rosebaum, 42 North Drexel avenue, will be married Friday night in the Episcopal church at St. Joseph. The bride is a graduate of Briarcliffe Alanor, New York, and attended Miss Moxley’s school in Rome and the University of Alissouri, where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Lieutenant Rosebaum is a graduate of West
Mrs. R. M. Edwards Will Be Host to State Voters Group
“Finance Field Day’’ that was to have been held Thursday by the Indiana League of Women Voters, has been postponed until September, when Mrs. Richard M, Edwards, Peru, will be hostess at her summer home at Lake Maxinkuckee. This will be the opening fall meeting of the state group, and will be for the purpose of discussing the program, in relation to finances. Indianapolis League will hold its annual membership tea in September, but, according to present plans, will open its fall season in October, with a tentative date set for Oct. 12, with an institute conducted by Miss Edith Rockwood, Washington, national secretary, on the program of the department of public welfare In government of the national league. This department will hold & twoday meeting in St. Louis, Oct. 8 imd 9, with the state members gs th*
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
country include: Vice-President Charles Curtis, William Allen White, Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Mrs. Edward Everett Gann, Mrs. Charles Sumner Bird, Professor Isaac Lippencott, Mrs. Richard Cabot, Ruth St. Dennis and other prominent Republicans. Mrs. Edward E. Toner, Anderson, and Oswald Ryan will speak at the luncheon on “Loyalty to the Constitution, a Patriotic Duty;” William L. Taylor on “Where Are We Heading?”; Thomas C. Howe on “Hoover, a Man of Destiny,” and Charles W. Jewett on “Our Constitution.” Governor Harry G. Leslie will speak on “Woman’s Contribution to the Republican Party.”
Point, and attended Wabash college and the University of Washington. He is a Phi Delta Theta. Lieutenant Rosebaum and his bride will leave after the ceremony for a wedding trip to the Great Lakes. They will go to Ft. George G. Aleade, Aid., where Lieutenant Rosebaum is stationed as a student and instructor in the tank school. They will sail soon for Fiance, where he has been detailed as an American army officer observer in the French tank school in Versailles. They will remain in France eighteen months.
five committees that make up the department in attendance. Mrs. Roscoe Anderson, Webster, Mo., vice-president in charge of the department of the national league, will preside Miss Rockwood and some of the national chairmen will be available following this meeting, for talks before various leagues. Board of the Indianapolis league will hold its final meeting July 14, at the home of Mrs. William P. Snethen, 3034 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Warren K. Mannon has been appointed chairman of the personnel committee of the local voters’ group. The committee will have as Its purpose, the Increasing of the working farce of the Indianapolis league, through discovering the interests oC its neshira,
Convention of C. D. A. Is Opened Catholic Daughters of America opened their fourteenth biennial international convention today at Atlantic City, N. J. The meeting will continue through Saturday. The program will open with a radio broadcast over station WPG at 6 tonight Bishop William J. Hafey, Raleigh, N. C., national chaplain; Miss Mary C. Duffy, Newark, N. J., international president, and John B. Kennedy, New York, associate editor of Collier’s The first convention banquet will be held tonight. Business meeting will be hold each day, with stress being laid upon charity work of the organization and the aiding of the unemployment situation. Features will be two elaborate pageants, “An Hour With the Lily of France,” depicting the life of Joan of Arc, and commemorating the 500th anniversary of the martyrdom of the Maid of Orleans; and the “Junior, a Pageant of Youth,” presented by the Junior Catholic Daughters, portraying various phases of their program of work. Miss Lola Lopez, Newark, N. J., who has wide experience on the stage and concert platform, ■will take the part of Joan of Arc. Delegates are registered from all parts of the United States, Canada, Porto Rico, Cuba and the Panama Canal Zone. Election of supreme officers and national directors will be held at the final business meeting FYiday.
Bridal Pair to Be Given Bridge Fete Mr. and Mrs. Orris E. Stanfield will entertain with a bridge party tonight at their heme, 91014 West drive, Woodruff Place, in honor of Mrs. Stanfield’s sister, Miss Elinor Carpenter, and her fiance, Allison Verne McCullough, who will be married Saturday. The house will be decorated with roses and summer flowers, and appointments will carry out a pastel color scheme. Guests will include: Messrs, and Mesdames Norman L Schneider. William Randall. Edward Greene Harry Filler. Herbert Galloway, Otto Mahrdt. Clyde Titus. Paul Carpenter. Mrs. John Ricke. Mr. and Mrs. Noble T. Crane. Huntington: Mrs. Robert McCullough. Worcester. Mass.: A .B. Carpenter, Milwaukee, and Fred Carpenter. Miami, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Carpenter will entertain Tuesday night at their home, 926 West drive, Woodruff place, with a bridal dinner for the families, in honor of their daughter and Mr. McCullough.
Butler Group to Be Host at 1933 Sessions Butler university chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, national journalistic sorority, will be host to the 1933 national convention, according to an announcement made last week at the University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo., where the sorority was in session. Miss Jane Hadley, representing the Butler chapter, presented the petition for the convention. Delegates will be present from thirty-seven active, and several alumnae chapters. Sessions will continue for five days, with chapters from Indiana and De Pauw university assisting the Butler chapter with arrangements. Business meetings will be held at the Fairview campus, with social affairs downtown.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Shaker Damoose and family, Grand Rapids, Mich., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Risk, 2415 Brookside parkway, south drive. Miss Wideha Risk and Ferris Risk have returned from a two weeks’ motor trip into Canada and to Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Deane and son Leslie, 406 North Gladstone avenue, will spend this week in Columbus, 0., the guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Holden. Airs. lies Ogle and son, Orlando B. lies, 4400 North Meridian street, will spend the summer in Maxinkuckee. Miss Marjorie Kittle is spending some time with her sister, Mrs. Burton Hart Jackson in Greenwich, Conn. She will join her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sloan Kittle later in the summer at their home in Maxinkuckee. Miss Barbara Douglas, Seville apartments, has returned from Crooked Lake, where she spent two weeks with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Douglas, Franklin, at their summer cottage. Mr. and Mrs. S. Taylor Clayton, Cleveland, 0., have returned to their home after spending the week-end here with Mr. Clayton’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. S. H. Clayton, 60 Riley avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Meisberger, Misses Kathryn Hazel, Celestine Donnelly, Helen Fitzgerald, Estelle Sadlier; Andrew Smith, Russell Pierson, George Mason and Joseph Norton, Chicago, spent the weekend at Lake Wawasee, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert AI. Woollen, 3607 Spring Hollow road, have gone to their summer home at Les Cheneaux, Mich. Airs. Mark H. Reasoner, Miss Dorothy and Robert Reasoner, have returned from Minneapolis, Mifih., and have gone to Bass Lake to spend the summer at their cottage, Craigielea.
Card Parties
Fidelity Review No. 140, W. B. A., will hold a covered dish luncheon and card party Wednesday at Castle hall, in honor of Mrs. Alice Wiltshire, president and supreme representative to the national convention, and! the drill team who Stt give a exhibition July 30.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 18 cents for which send Pat- . - _ tern No. 4 5 2 Sise Street .. ••••••••••••••••••••A* City Nam* •••••••••••••••••#•••••••••••* St&t£ sHMsssts*ssssstssssi ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••ft
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FOR SPORTS OR
AIORE DRESSY WEAR An all-occasion printed crepe silk that always look smare wherever it goes. The scalloped peplum gives the skirt a smart appearance. The bolero with scalloped edge is youthfully becoming. This charming model has many possibilities. Eyelet batiste in maize lends fresh summer charm for afternoons at the country club or for town. More sportive is Chinese silk damask in yellow that launders perfectly, proving itself a very economical choice. Then there is a crepe silk shantung that you’ll like immensely in Nile green, pink or white. Style No. 452 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. The 16-year size requires four yards of 39-inch material. Our large Fashion Magazine shows the latest Paris styles for adults and children. Also modern embroidery and instructive lessons in sewing. i Price of book, 10 cents. Price of pattern, 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin. carefully.
Miss Syvene Is Married to O. L. Williams Mr and Mrs. John W. Ritter, 239 North Illinois street, announce the marriage of their daughter, Marguerite Syvene, to Omer L. Williams, son of Mrs. Mary J. Williams Eckerty, which took place at 7:30 Saturday night at the Roberts Park Methodist Episcopal church. The Rev. W. F. Rothenburger, pastor of the Third Christian church, read the ceremony in the presence of only the immediate relatives and close friends. Miss Genevieve Smith, pianist, played. The couple was attended by Miss Agnes Barnes and Edward Jackson, Shelbyville. Mr. and Mrs. Williams left after the ceremony for a motor trip They will make their home in the McKay apartments, 611 North Pennsylvania street. MARY E. STARR TO MARRY lOWA MAN Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Starr 3442 North Capitol avenue have announced the engagement of their daughter, Mary Emily, to Donald Mooney, Adair, la. The wedding will take place Aug. 9 in the First Congregational church. Afiss Starr attended De Pauw university and is a graduate of Denver She ls a ™mber of Kappa Deffa sorority. Mooney is a graduate of lowa State college. Both hfJh b u en teachers the junior high school at Muskegon, Mich. , W. R. C. to Meet Mrs. Sylvester Waldon, 1758 Howrtoi * tTe ?b wiU 1,6 hostesa Wednesday for the monthly luncheon meet£nff fhe CouncU of Past Presidents, George H. Chapman, W. R. c.
free-finger wave Every day excent Saturday Thia coupon good for FREE finger 35c shampoo u taken or good for FREE marcel capably given under expert supervision every day except Saturday. 9:30 to 5:30. and Monday and Wednesday evening. 6 to 9:30. Avery smaQ charge for all other treatments. CKMTBAX, MACTT COLLEGE M near OM FeUe* Bldg. 14. HU BE BEAtmrtJL
.JULY 6, 1931
Cabana Club Will Issue Invitations Invitations will be issued this week to Indianapolis society for membership in the Cabana Bath Club of Indianapolis, which, when completed, will be one of the city’s most exclusive and fashionable clubs. Announcement of the building plan has just been made. Option has been taken on three sites north of the city limits, with the final selection to be made later. The proposed plan is copied from the ultra-fashionable bath clubs at Palm Beach and Miami, Fla. Building will start when membership has reached fifty-five. There will be two classes of memberships, Cabana members and non-Cabana members. Cost Set at 5100,000 Cabana members will own in fee their individual Cabana, which Is a small structure, containing a large room, with dressing room, shower bath, lavatory and wardrobe, with a patio or porch in front, covered with awning, and finished with a porch glider. The Cabanas will be built around three sides of a large swimming pool, with a fllterer which will change the water completely every eight hours. The pool will be bordered with white sand and a board walk. A large club house will be erected at the fourth side of the pool, for the use of non-Cabana members. There will be lockers and lounges here for men and women, with a tea room, and open air dance pavilion oh the roof. Non-Cabana members will have full privileges of the club. The club will be built of colored stucco and tile in Spanish design, at an approximate cost of SIOO,OOO. Appoint Depository A depository will be appointed to pay on construction costs and managerial expenses at the approval of the president and treasurer to be elected by the membership when it reaches fifty-five. A membership committee to be elected by the members and directors will have the power to reject or approve the sale or rental of a Cabana by a club member. Each member of the family of a club member will be issued an associate membership card without charge, which will entitle him to an individual locker, and other privileges of the club. No guest card will admit any guest unless escorted by a member or associate member of the club. A Cabana club of similar plan and design was recently constructed at Bexley, a fashionable suburb of Columbus, 0., and has been very popular.
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Just Every Day Sense
BY MBS. WALTER FERGUSON
WHEN the worst Is over, we probably shall look back and see that the depression was in some ways a friend in disguise. Organizations, for instances, are having the hardest kind of sledding. It has become almost impossible to raise half of the vast sums that once were so easy to obtain and that went into all kinds of uplift movements. Making over our brother, putting pep into the community, and dispensing “service” all over the place, is becoming increasingly difficult. A good many giant organizations that flourished in the prosperous past may expire from lack of funds. And that might not be so bad as it sounds. There is no doubt that over-organization is one of the serious ills from which we suffer. Probably less than % of 1 per cent of the entire population belongs to no national society. * Multitudes of us have our names on numerous membership rolls and very little for our money. Clubs, societies, national this, that and the other have cluttered up our lives until we can’t think straight. If we have a conviction we feel we must go and join something. U tt u AND while much good has been done by certain of these organizations, it is not to be denied that we have failed to get our money’s worth when we consider the expense of most of them. Them is a topheaviness now in their management that offsets most of the benefits they can bestow. Consider for a .moment the money that is spent in this country on the single item of sending delegates to conventions. We could pay off the soldiers’ bonus with it in a few yeys. And if all the dues put out annually were collected in one sum, it would feed all the hungry mouths In the world. I am convinced that one of the reasons for this depression is !J at !l ave L et the del egates do our thinking for so long. Sorority to Meet Alpha chapter, Pi sigma Tau soror.ty, will meet Tuesday night at the home of Miss Mary Ann Quigley, 343 North Leslie avenue. Plana for the sorority camping trip will be completed. *
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