Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 54, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1931 — Page 6

PAGE 6

FRILLS ARE PREVALENT IN LATEST OF FRENCH FASHIONS •

Hat Plumes, Lace Appear in Society i BY NEA SERVICE • PARIS, July 13.—Ostrich plumed hats, sponsored by fashionables during week-end social activities, have caused the same stirring excitement that long skirts caused two years ago. There has been marked evidence o! a revival of the Victorian style In dress at the Grand Prix and the Annual Fete d' Elegance. . Mannequins appeared in fitted jackets with flowing skirts, with lingerie muffs, small parasols, net and lace gloves, mitts and other details recalling the bygone mauve decade and earlier periods. New hats perhaps are the most commented upon of all the various aspects of the new mode. There is a distinct trend toward hats tilted over the eye at one side and off the hair on the other. Added to this new head silhouette are feathers of all kinds, and the effect is devastatingly different. Ostrich Flumes Smart Ostrich trimming in plumes and small tips are seen on many smart women. At the Auteil Steeplechase, the countess of Vitrolles wore a white tricorn with black and white tips on the side that dipped over one eye. The countess of Miramont wore a white hat with a small brim, and from the center around the brim and trailing off over her shoulder was a long wliite ostrich plume to match the white gloves, purse, shoes and frock she wore. Entire birds are seen as trimming on small boat-shaped hats. One black hat had a black and white bird against 1 its upturned small brim. Feather Boas Accessories Lingerie dresses, made with long flowing skirts and much lace trimming, are seen in numbers. Eyelet embroidery and dainty organdie vie with each other. One gown was made of baby Irish lflce and had a muff to match. Another muff costume that caused much comment was a beruffed creation of dainty flowered pink organdie chiffon, with a trailing ostrich feather plume. Feather boas are being worn again and arc taken seriously as a style accessory. One blue and gray printed chiffon gown was worn with a gray and blue feather boa with long tassles of feathers. One of the costumes that caused the most comment at Auteuil was a sheer white lingerie gown made with much hand-work and topped by a fitted velvet jacket in ceil blue with white maribou feathers outlining the huge, standing collar, the peplum and three-quarter, sleeves. Opinions Divided Topping it was one of the new hats with a sweeping ostrich plume in white from the brim over the right eye, around the left side of the crown and curling off to the side of the rear. There is a division of opinion as to just what effect these ultrafeminine modec will have. Some feel they are too exaggerated and will cause a reaction from so much fuss and feathers. Others feel they will have a distinct effect upon the general appearance in line and decoration of the new fall clothes. For in past years it has been a safe saying that “as go the styles at the Grande Semaine in Paris, so go the fashions for fall.’’ It remains to be seen when the best houses have their openings next month to just what extent they have gone Victorian. MISS BURKE WILL PRESENT RECITAL Miss Ida 'Evelyn Burke will present Marjorie Ann Senson in an elementary piano graduation recital at 8 July 21 at Olive Branch Christian church, Raymond and South Pennsylvania streets. She will be assisted by Elizabeth and Ruth Reddehase. Bertha and Elizabeth Miller and Richard Robinett.

Miss Lorena Curran Bride of John Berling in Home Rites

Miss Lorena Curran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Curran, and John H. Berling were married at 8:30 Saturday night at the home of the bride’s parents, 366 South Emerson avenue. The Rev. W. G. Morgan read the double ring ceremony before an improvised altar of palms and ferns, lighted with cathedral candles. Joseph Regains sang “At Dawning” and ‘“I Love You Truly.” Miss Mary Curran was her slsster’s maid of honor. She wore blue fchiffon with pink accessories. Another sister, Miss Grace Curran, was the bridesmaid, and wore pink organdie with pink accessories. Both carried butterfly roses.

Miss Mary Weber Married to W. P. Shay in Church Rites

Miss Mary Weber, daughter of Mrs. Margaret Weber, 1416 Linwood avenue, became the bride of William P. Shay, son of Mrs. Mary F. Shay lit 8 Saturday morning at the Little Flower church. The Rev. Charles Duffy performed the ceremony. Palms and ferns decorated the altar. A program of organ music Was played. The bride wore a gown of beige lace, with a hair braid picture hat, and slippers to match, and carried a shower bouquet of Bride roses. Miss Alice Weber, maid of honor, was her sister's only attendant. Sine wore blue mdusselin de sole with blue picture hat and slippers, and carried pink rosea and blue delph- | toum. I John J. Pleming, Danville, 111, | was beat man. A wedding breakfast at the Cos lumbia Club followed the ceremony. * Mrs Weber wore printed chiffon and Mrs. Shay wore gray chiffon. Tie table was centered with a wed- • *

NEAR-VICTORIAN MODES PREDOMINATE

Frilly, ultra-feminine, almost Victorian are these new styles seen recently in France. At left is a sheer white lingerie gown worn with fitted velvet ceil blue jacket outlined in white maribou.

What’s in Fashion?

White—Anywhere, Any Time Directed By AMOS PARRISH

For spectator sports a white costume with bright color bag, hat band and dress trimming.

The bride wore ruffled white taffeta. Her tulle veil was fashioned with a lace cap, trimmed at the back with orange blossoms. She carried a shower of Bride roses. A reception followed the wedding, after which Mr. and Mrs. Berling left for a motor trip east. The bride wore a traveling suit of eggshell satin, with linen slippers and accessors to match. They will be at home after July 25 at 5132 Maple lane. \ Guests from out of town were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Curran, Mrs. Edith Sheets and son of Versailles, Mrs. R. E. Clem and son, Maurice Clem, and daughter, Miss Wilma Clem, and Mrs. Ben Curran, Bedford, Ky.

ding cake on a plateau of roses and delphinium. Mr. anc>. Mrs. Shay have left for a trip through the Great Lakes and New England. She traveled in a green boacle suit, with matching accessories. They will be at home after Aug 1 at 625 Parker avenue. BROAD RIPPLE SHOW IS SEEN BY 2,500 Approximately 2,500 persons, the largest crowd which yet has seen a stage show at Broad Ripple park this year, turned out Sunday night to see Jac Broderick's Kiddie Revue. Comprised of song and dance numbers, the revue included Indianapolis and Muncie children. Among those who took prominent parts were Julia Alice Black, Eleanor Ellis, Geraldine Duke, Paddy Minor, Anna May Duke, Patricia Downs. Helen Miller, Bobby Bird and Mary Greenfield.

The white hat shown upper center has a long, curling ostrich plume, and v,he one shown below is decorated with black tips. At right is a flowered pink organdie chiffon with lace muff to match.

NEW YORK, July 13.—White about face—is fashion’s summer command. Also white about the hands and feet and head. White everywhere in the summer costume is fashionable. Fashionable for playing tennis, golf and other sports. Fashionable for watching them, too. It’s fashionable for. street wear and for afternoon-or- evening costumes. Even fashionable for the beach and in the water. Fash ion says—and fashion-know-ing women agree—white dresses are certainly smart. So are white coats and jackets and hats; white shoes, bags, gloves and belts; white collars and cuffs, white scarfs, white jewelry. And white mesh stockings are the newest mode in white sports wear. Sports Dresses Simple Fashion-knowing women are wearing very simple, tailored white dresses for sports. White cotton meshes, flat crepe, shantungs or cottons, usually made without sleeves. For spectator sports wear, dresses are still quite tailored, but with cap or polo sleeves. Three-quarter or long sleeves appear on white street dresses, or if the sleeves are short, a white jacket is added. Less tailored than the sports fashion—softer in line—but stit. simple. Fine Handwork Fine detail and handwork elaborate the white afternoon dress—tucld'ig, hand-drawn work or fagotting. Choose this dress with threequarter or long wide sleeves, and you’re fashion-right. In the evening, w r hite satin or crepe, ankle length and slim, or white dresses of organdie or eyelet batiste, ankle length but fuller, are seen wherever fashionable women gather. White coats as well as white dresses are in summer fashion. White polo coats for boats and boardwalks and beaches. White flannels, basket weaves, cottons and linens where the scenery is warmer, Velvet for Evening White silk coats and jackets smartly accompany dresses on the street or in the afternoon. And the short white velvet wrap is a newer evening fashion. The all-white costume —dress, hat, shoes, gloves, jew’elry—is smart, But so is the white costume with a dash of color in the accessories. The white dress with brown shoes, gloves and hat, for example, or the white dress with navy shoes, belt and necklace. Any color you want to put with it O oes with white. Red is one of the best, used in small doses, like a bracelet, a handbag, a belt or a handkerchief. White for Accent White’s just about the smartest thing you can use for an accent jon a dark costume, too. You’ve noticed, of course, how many women ! are wearing white gloves with navy j or brown suits and dresses and coats. How much white jewelry is being worn with dark costumes, too, and how often a dark dress will have a collar or frill that makes the white about the face that’s so becoming to | almost everybody. And don’t forget—if your dress !is white, the lingerie beneath it should be white, too. (CoDvricht. 1931. bv Amos Parrish) | Next: The fashion for bright i colored jumpers is discussed by ! Amos Parrish. BRIDGE PARTYWILL | HONOR MRS. ALLEN Miss Leona Mangan will entertain with a bridge party tonight at her home, 37 West Twenty-first street, in honor of Mrs. J. E. Allen, Miami, Fla., formerly of this city, who is visiting here. Summer flowers will be used in decorati'/r, and appointments will harmonic?. The hostess will be assisted by Miss Alma Morrow. Guests with Mrs. Allen and Miss Morrow will be Mrs. E. Guy Hancock, Misses Hazel Church, Edna Augstein, Agnes Dager, Genevieve McKay, and Jesse Moore, New York. Mrs. Belief To Entertain Mrs. A. G. Belief, 605 Buchanan street, will entertain members of the Francis Review 8, W. B. A. with a luncheon Tuesday her home.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Shower to Be Held for Miss Mast Mrs. John Thomas Hawkins, 40 West Twenty-seventh street, will be hostess tonight at a bridge party and handkerchief shower in honor of Miss Dorcthy Mast, whose marriage to F. Evan Weeks will take place July Id. Decoration;! will be in pink and green. Tables will be lighted by candles at serving time, and the house will be decorated with garden flowers. The hostess will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. J. J. Voelcker and Mrs. Florence Hawkins. Guests will include: Medsames Fied W. Sellers. Kokomo; Mrs. W. W. Kemper, Louisville; Fred T. Brown, Edward R. Eales. Charles Seidensticker, Katherine Mast, Misses Katherine Wacker, Helen Ludgln, Roberta Wodtke. Marth.i Hunt, Ruth Mueller and Sue Voelcker. Mrs. Kemper will entertain with a personal shower Tuesday night in honor of her sister at the home of Mrs. Seidensticker, 1231 North Alabama street.

Just Every Day Sense

BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

MODERN woman’s greatest oppression is the tyranny of beauty standards. She can’t have any fun because she must be waging an incessant war against homeliness End old age. All her extra, energy, that could be used to such excellent advantage in digging real joy out of living, goes into efforts to look younger and prettier than she is. In this, at least, we still are slaves of men. They expect us always to bf alluring. If wt are not, they promptly trot off in search of others who are, so we spend our days preening and our nights trying to act gayer than we feel. < Yet may we for a moment gaze upon the great American man? In the matter of looks, he is nothing to stop a lady’s heart. Yet the homelier he is, the more certain he will be to demand that all his girl friends be lovely. When one has watched the frantic, the desperate efforts, of fairly nice-lcoking, wives to retain the affection of husbands who have all the physical allure of freight cars, one begins to question the justice of the universe. u u u WHENCE came this idea that nothing but the fairest is is worthy even the most insignificant of men? Not from nature’, since there the male is always the gaudy and beautiful one. It is evider t that the men themselves thought it up, at about the same time, I suppose, that they set up the theory that they were God’s chosen and that for them all good things of earth had been made. So, today, the gentleman with a pate as bald as anew laid egg can not love a dame unless her hair is a glory about her face. The rotund gent demands a sylph-like partner. The gazoo with the baboon features must have a fairy for a sweetheart. For a man can be squint-eyed, bowlegged, unshapely, and stupid as an ox in the bargain, yet he honestly believes that for him fate must provide a Lorelei and that cnly stunnirg beauty is worthy his companionship. This is another item of over-production-male conceit. New Lawn Piece Have you seen those convenient pieces of outdoor furniture that combine a table and seat? The table top swings over to made a back for the . \t when not needed as a table. They can be bought unpainted and painted to match either the house or the ] est of the garden furniture. Wash White Oxfords If you wear white oxfords, wash your shoe laces every few days. Nothing detracts so much from immaculateness is soiled laces in clean shoes.

Use Best of Creams for Facial Care BY ALICIA HART If you have a norjnal skin, cherish it! Economize, if youj must, on the clothes you wear and the entertainment you enjoy. But remember that the best; beauty ‘ preparations in the world are none too good for a normal skin. First of all, you should use a quick-melting cleansing cream on a normal skin, not a heavy one. Get one of these that liquifies the minute it touches the warmth of your face, or even your hands as you put it on. Work this cleanser into your skin with soft, light strokes, using special care around the nose and on the chin, for these are places where the skin is oiliest and the most dirt adheres. > Cleansing Important Wipe off all this cleanser with a soft cloth or tissue. Then wash your face with tepid water and soap. There are dozens and dozens of good facial soaps. Your choice is your own business. Personally, I feel there is nothing like the bland caress of the best quality of castile. It is what is preferred for babies. To be sure it doesn’t smell as fragrant as roses or as fresh as lavender. But It takes the dirt off without drying the swin, which is more than sweet smells to the intelligent womiin. After washing the face, it is a good thing to use a little clarifying cream. Ever, that lovely normal skin of yours may have a tendency to slight discolorations once in a while, and this will take care of that. Tone Siin With Lotion After creaming your face with this clarifying cream, use a bracing lotion cf ’ some good brand. This tones up the skin and stimulates It. And it also closes the pores and eliminate!! any excess fat your creams may have fed your skin. You are not likely to need a powder base of cream if your skin is normal. But if in doubt use one, for there is no way so satisfactory to preserve a make-up that is a work of art as' to build it on the firm foundation of a good basic cream. I am asked constantly how often you should give your skin such treatment as I have'just outlined for the normal skin. Morning and night you should squeeze in time enough for beautifying. If not both times, nights are the preferred. You have more time. You will be more careful. And if you have the good fortune to have a beautiful skin, it would be foolish, indeed, not to preserve it. MISS M’PHEETERS TO WED IN AUGUST Miss Mary E. MePheeters, daughter of T. H. MePheeters, 52 Audubon road, has chosen Aug. 22 as the date of her marriage to Robert D. Moor. The ceremony will be held at 8:30 at Irvington Presbyterian church. Mrs. Clell T. Rice, her sister, will be matron of honor, and Mrs. John W. MePheeters, Philadelphia, and Miss Mildred ' Esaman, Columbia City, bridesmaids. MISS WALLACE IS WED AT DECATUR Mrs. Elizabeth Studebaker Morrison, Decatur, announce the marriage of her granddaughter, Miss Hariet Wallace, to James L. Beatty Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Beatty, 2111 Park avenue, which took place July 6 at the First Presbyterian church in Decatur. Both the bride and bridegroom are former students of Indiana university, where the bride was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, and Mr. Beatty a member of Sigma Chi. They will be at home in Indianapolis after Oct. 1. MISS MOORE HONORS FORMER MISS CLINE Miss Marjorie Moore, assisted by her mother, Mrs. Louella Moore, entertained Saturday afternoon at her home, 2226 North Talbot street, with a bridge party and miscellaneous shower in honor of Mrs. William H. Mayer, formerly Miss Mary Lou Cline, Chicago. Guests included: Mesdames Raymond Sanders. Brooks Bushong, R. H. Benedict. M. G. Davis, Misses Mary Dyer. Hanah Lynch, Mary Sweeney. Jenne Parke Sheffer, Mary Margaret Keers and Florence McCoy. ALPHA Cm CLUB TO HOLD MEETING Alpha Chi Alumnae Club of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold a supper meeting at 6 Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Marie Brigham, 120 West Forty-first street. The hostess will be assisted by Misses Dorothy Barrett and Constance Jones. Chapters to Meet Alpha and Gamma chapters of Gamma Delta Alpha sorority will hold a joint business meeting at 8 tonight at the Antlers,

Daily Recipe PHILADELPHIA SCRAPPLE 1 pound lean pork 1 quart water 1 cup commeal 11-2 teaspoons salt Cook the pork in water until quite tender; remove meat, broth (1 quart) to the boiling broth (1 quart) to the boiling point, stir in the commeal and cook two hours. Add seasoned chopped meat and fat. Cook 20 minutes longer. Pour into cold, wet loaf pan. When firm, slice, dip in flour and brown in hot butter.

NEW BEACH ENSEMBLES

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Pajama and parasol ensembles introduce something different to the midsummer beaches. White shantung, favored from coast to coast this year, makes the languorous two-piece suit (shown above) from Worth, with royal blue touches in the scarf, sandals and the plaid silk sunshade which takes place of a hat. For one who prefers mid-summer flowers, there’s a gay flowered shantung suit (right), from Worth, with poppies in California red and orange tints making an all-over design This one-piece suit has a backless bodice cut, with just a strap of the material running around the neck from shoulder to shoulder The trousers are full and long, hiding the cute red and orange beach sandals. The gay parasol picks up the poppy colors in a dashing big plaid which contrasts with the* fig-

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find •15 cents for which send Pat- A tt tZ tern No. O O Size Street City Name State

i

CHIC MODEL IN COTTON This new cotton vogue has been taken up by smart New Yorkers. The model illustrated is pretty nice. It’s such a practical dress, that one will find so much use for all summer long. It’s self-patterned organdie in the favorite yellow. The narrow belt is opal green velvet ribbon. Style No. 455 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Its small cost will surprise you. Equally dainty are chiffon voile prints, eyelet batiste, printed batiste, crepe silk prints and chiffon prints. Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39inch material, with 4% yards of binding and % yard of 13%-inch contrasting for vest. Our large Fashion Magazine shows the latest Paris styles for adults and children. Also modem 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. For a. delectable summer salad, use alligator pear, tomatoes and cucumbers, marinated along with the lettuce that goes with them, in a big bowL

Miss Nelson Is Married to J. W. Rhodes Marriage of Miss Kathryn Nelson, 927 East Morris street, to John William Rhodes, which took place June 22 at the St. Joan of Arc church, hJs been announced. The Rev. Maurice O’Connor officiated. The couple was attended 'by Mrs. Anna Zelner and Leo Alhand. A wedding breakfast at the new home of the bride and bridegroom, 5837 Central avenue, followed the ceremony. Rhodes is a graduate of the engineering school of Purdue university, and is a member of Phi Delta Chi fraternity.

Miss Gertrude Krieg Honored at Surprise Party, Shower

Miss Gertrude Krieg, ‘whose marriage to Carl Folkening, Beech Grove, will take place Aug. 2, at the Trinity Lutheran church, was hon-

Personals

Miss Eileen O’Connor, 1425 North Pennsylvania street, has gone to Chicago for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Moorehead have returned from a honeymoon in Chicago and are spending a few days with Mrs. Moorehead’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Roche, 5665 Broadway. They will leave Wednesday for New York. Mrs. George Rockwood, 1606 North Delaware street, is spending a few days at the Roosevelt in New York. Miss Sara Tyce Adams, 4340 Central avenue, who is spending July at Lake Wawasee, spent Friday and Saturday in Indianapolis. Miss Bernice Giltner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Giltner, 3364 Carrollton avenue, will sail F’riday for Europe. Mrs. William H. Block and Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Block will sail this week on the Isle de France for a six weeks’ stay in Europe.

Card Parties

A luncheon and card party will be held a’. 12:30 Tuesday at Our Lady of Lourdes church, 5315 East Washington street, Frfthcis Review, 8, W. B. A., will give a card party at 2:30 Wednesday at the Red Men’s hall, Capitol and North street. L. A. A. O. H., division 3, will give a card party at 8 on Tuesday night at Woodmen’s hall, 1025 Prospect street.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Fresh apricots, cereal, cream, poached eggs on graham toast, milk, coffee. * i Luncheon — Curry of chicken, stuffed tomato salad, mint parfait, nut cookies, Iced tea and lemonade. U M 0 Dinner — Veal cutlets, milk, gravy, riced potatoes, spinach in lemon butter, head lettuce with hard-cooked egg dressing, red raspberries and cream, cup cakes, milk, coffee.

.JULY 13, mi

50 Are at City Camp ofY.W.C.A: Fifty girls from all parts of the state this week are attending Camp Delight. Y. W. C. A. camp on White river. Assisting Miss Jenna Birks, program director, are: Misses loma Jean Hodson, recreation; Mary Prlckett. Marlon, swimming: Maria*. E. Taylor. Logansport, craft; Evalj-n mnrson. Farmland, nature: Marian I. Smith, dr lunatics and swimming. Mrs.. Marian Fisher Bogardus Is camp director. Campers from I ndianapolls are: Catherine Ewing. Betty Mcllett. Jean Mellett. Hannah Pert. Roberta Ehlers, Vesta Bailey. Dulca Bailey. Mary Jane Graham. Irene Chandler. Mae Cooper, Nina Ferguson. Mary Church. Patsy Rhodes. Juanita Caldwell. Pearl Scott, Francis Herring. Nellie Mae McCloud. Narthern Northern. Mary Francis Keseler. Emma Horbake, Louise Scoller. Betya J. Bejk, Josephine Clifton. Isabel Sommers, Marguerite Sommers. Virginia Sloaft, Maxine Elmore. Gwendolyn Hatfleld, Jewell Thompson. Haze! Rectmaker. Marie Holltr and Fern Jones. Out-of-town girls are: Bonnie Jean Beale, Eleanore Georg*, Marjorie Ann Wilson and Martha Haydoa, Rushville; Edith Behrens and Martha Ellen Howard. Anderson; Fern Able, Nelia Fulford, Pauline Brown, Elisabeth Duttoh and Lois Russell. Martinsville. Miss Morgan to Be Bride on Aug. 29 Engagement of Miss Mary Elizabeth Morgan to Murray Cassell Rickel of Warsaw was announced at a bridge party held Saturday afternoon by her mother, MfS. Wade H. Morgan, at her home, 548 North Beville avenue. The wedding will take plaed Aug. 29 at Woodruff Place Baptist church. Miss Morgan also has chosen her attendants. Miss Thelma Maby, Akron, will be maid of honor, and Misses Glee Walker, Montpelier; Ardis. Wiseman, Corydon; Ruth Ebner and Catherine Moore, bridesmaids. Roses were used in decoration, and appointments in pastel shades carried out the bride’s colors. Guests at the party were: Mesdames Elizabeth Hacker, Charles Rickel, Carl Callahan. Bernard Stuvai. Warren Rose, Harry Morgan. William Bennett, Clyde Huey, Ward Brandenburg. Helen Montgomery, Vernon Cravens, Rolland Rapier, John Berry, Theodore Simon. Virginia Butler. Elizabeth Clark, Raymond Scott, Evelyn Bech, Misses Pauline Hacker, Ruth and Irene Robinson, Rosehanna Hunt, Bee Goodpastur*. Louise Holtman, Marion Davis. Thelma Burton. Mildred Morgan, Dorothy Hewitt, Helen Tomlinson. Ella Hansen. Cleo Justice, Virginia Fort, Winifred Wilie, Wilhelmina Oeffler. Elizabeth Mueller; Gertrude Ebner, Ruth Higgins and Lena Short. Alpha chapter, Pi Sigma Tau sorority, will meet tonight at th® home of Miss Josephine Ragsdale; 5618 Lowell avenue. Arrangements will be made for a w'eek’s camping party at Heflen’s camp.

ored at a surprise party and kitchen shower given Saturday night by Misses Hilda Folkening and Erma Woempner, at the home of Mi*g Folkening in Beech Grove. Miss Folkening is a sister of the bride-groom-elect. All details of the appointments and decorations were in various sizes of umbrellas, with small silk umbrellas in the bridal colors—biu®, green, yellow and white—as favors. Guests embroidered linen tea towels, which were presented to Miss Krieg. Guests with Mrs. August Krieg and Mrs. Charles Folkening, mothers of the bride and bride-groom-elect, were: Mesdames Ernest Krieg. Harry Wolf. Raymond Rode. Walter Folkening. Urban Folkening. Edwin Folkening. Edwin Waterman. Harold Folkening, Misses Marla Schakel. Hilda Hartman. Hilda Woempner, Ma Adeline Woempner. Esther Woempner. Esther Rode. Laura Rode. Helen Folken* in*. Esther Schakel and Caroline Schakel* MRS. GOLDSTEIN WILL BE HOSTESS Mrs. Albert Goldstein will be hostess for a musical garden party at! 3 Friday at her home, 4425 North Meridian street, to be held under the auspices of Temple Sisterhood, Executive board is in charge of arrangements. assisting the hostess will be Mesdames Isaac Bom, Jay Kahn, I. Solomon, Harry B. Jacobs, Esther Kiser, I. G. Kahn, L. J. Borinsteia and Samuel Miller.

FREE FREE FINGER W AVE-MARCEL BRING THIS COUPON Absolutely FREE, you do not have to buy anything. Given under expert supervision every day except Saturday. Also Monday. Wednesday and Friday evenings. A small charge is made for any other treatment. CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Llncola 0432

day /Cruibe %n C CHICAGO l D BUFFALO (Niagara Falls) and return Including Meals and Berth S. S. Tionesta Sailing every Monday iz P. M. ‘ - Stopping at other principal pent* Consult agents about Lake Supexiaet. Service to Duluth t S. S. Juniata S. S. Gctorara For Further Information Apply any R. R. or Tourist Ticket Agency " GREAT LAKES TRANSIT CORPORATION 303 So. Dearborn St. Chicago, UL Wabash 6474 t