Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 57, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 July 1931 — Page 7

vTTLYIS,I93I

Dinner Will Be Held for Polo Group Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sutphln, North Delaware street, will entertain at dinner Saturday night at |he Indianapolis Country Club tor of the Comargo polo team •nd their wives. The team will Ineet the Rolling Ridge team of Indianapolis in a series of contests Saturday and Sunday afternoons at the Rolling Ridge held. Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Ruckelfehaus will give a luncheon Sunday t their summer home for the team. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Andrews, West Point, Lnd., are the guests of Mr. nd Mrs. William A. Atkins in Golden Hill, while the team is in the City. Other members of the team end their wives are being entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Suthpin and Mr. and Mrs. Ruckelshaus. ' The game Saturday will start at I. and at 3 Sunday afternoon. MRS. LYDA Is HOST AT BRIDGE PARTY Mrs. T. R. Lyda, 15 Campbell avenue, entertained Tuesday night at Per home with a bridge party in honor of Mrs. Ivan Bullard, Los Angeles, Cal., formerly of this city. Summer flowers were arranged %bout the house, and centered the tables at serving time. Appointments were in a corresponding design. Guests were: Mcsdames Maurice Cherry. Duke Hanna. Trank Luebkine, John Qalney. O. H. Wortrv. Claude Tyrea. Oradv Cline. Donald Stewart. Paul lake, C. D. Vawter. Carl Boleaa, Harold Bovd. Clara Weaver. Arl parrett. Ralph McKlnatrav. E. E. Schunack. Misses Esther Renfrew. Oladvs EllIjar. Julia Baker and Jean Crosssman.

UUANITA MYERS IS FETED AT SHOWER Miss Juanita Myers, Carmel, Jwhose marriage to Harold H. Gerjpard will take place July 21 at the ~First Methodist church in Carmel, ft as honored at a miscellaneous jshower given Wednesday night by Hilda Stelzner and Mary S-ouise Adams, at the home of Miss fc’ere: Mesdames Charles Beckert. Gertrude ’Taylor. Misses Olarabelle Woolery, Glenna wVay. Dorothy McGrew, Edith Smith, Xeota Leonard, Mamie Myers, Anna jeaster. Marguerite Crabb and Florlne Mftndall.

LUNCHEON HELD BY WEDNESDAY CLUB Members of the Wednesday After|koon Bridge Club entertained' on Wednesday at the Marott hotel with A luncheon-bridge. The table was centered with gladioli. An out-of-town guest was Mrs. Samuel Epstein of Detroit. Others present were: Mesdames Jack Fogle. Henry Berger, Harry Goldberg, Philip .Bernstein, Samuel Alpert, Max Sattinger, Sam Bartick and Isadore Bartick.

jr

Just Every' Day Sense

pY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

"TI7OMEN and politics," says VV Professor Charles Harry Shaw of New York university, “should be quits, for neither has oone the other any good.” J Now, as far as that goes, politics and men have not done each fther any good, either, for both ttill are sadly short of perfection. Anyway, why consider politics in relation to either men or women? The vote, after all, has nothing to do with whether one hapjpens to be male or female, but only with whether one happens to be a citizen of the republic. All these arguments as to the feood purpose of the woman vote are quite beside the point. Show jne any large group of men who vete only according to their honest convictions, and not for individual interests or the interests #f friends or party chiefs, and I ihall willingly agree to women no longer taking part in affairs of state. a a a iItTEN, however, never have been 3.Vi entirely disinterested participants m political matters. They do not ballot for principle half so much as they ballot for power and special privilege and loot. They Always will do this, I suppose, unless Utopia should evolve from nothingness. • You can not disassociate the business of government from the business of living, and so long as Women are concerned with the latter they should be permitted to help with the former. Now, if Professor Shaw had wished to be original he might have suggested that me.. ~nd politics be quits for a while and let Women try their hands and brains to see what they could do. This, too. probably would prove disastrous. Asa matter of fact, men and women together have left politics too emphatically *!one. That's what's the matter pow. We've abandoned things to professional politicians and are paying dearly for our folly. . To urge women to drop their interest in politics now is lamentably unwise. They instead should be roused to the need for concerted and intelligent action.

MISS M’CALLIAN ■ HOSTESS AT PARTY . Miss Frances McCallian. 543 North tray street, entertained Tuesdayright with a bunco party in honor f her cousins. Misses Dorothy and yilma McCallian, New Albany, who ye her house guests. ,'Others present were Misses Lutlle Zunmerman, Wanda Stevens, \ une Rants, Clara McCloskey, Vivi|n Lively and Marabelle Bannon. 2 FACE RUM CHARGES Mrs. Hattie Boyer and Arthur J. Smith faced blind tiger charges today as the result of a raid on their alleged 6peakea.*v at 708'j South West street late Wednesday. Police a*v they confiscated eight quarts of liter and some whisky.

What’s in Fashion?

Decorative Objects — Directed, By AMOS PARRISH—

NEW YORK, July 16—The barnyard has invaded the parlor. Horses, dogs, cats, chickens and cows fraternize amicably in

Glass Penguin and Pottery Horse

Staffordshire Dogs

gracious Queen Anne living rooms and stately Jacobean dining rooms, All for the sake of decoration. Many a fashionable home has some animal in pottery or glass—realistic or idealistic—making a decorative note. It may be amusing . , . it may be pure beauty—whichever your temperament dictates. But animals are only one phase of the fashion for individual, decorative objects that is so important in modern homes. Not so long ago we scoffed at the Dresden shepherdesses that stood on grandmother’s what-not. Today we wish we had them and in their place buy romantic figurines reminiscent of the past century, or very modernistic ones. There are Napoleons, court lords and ladies, costumed European peasants, 1931 wrestlers and dancers and classic Grecian figures to suit the taste of anyone. Even Sir Toby Belch, merry tippler of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, is reincarnated in the Toby jug that stands empty, but smartly, on many a modern mantel. Many of these decorative objects, like the animals and figurines, have absolutely no purpose in life except to look smart and to interest or

Card Parties

La Velle Gossett post, auxiliary 908, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a euchre and bunco party at 8:30 Friday night at the hall, King avenue and Walnut street. The committee in charge is Mrs. Ciiloe Michael and Mrs. Helen Welch. ALTRUSA CLUB TO ELECT AT DINNER Altrusa Club will hold election of officers Friday night at a dinner meeting at the Columbia Club. Misses Adelaide Lewis and Martha Abel will serve on the election board in place of Misses Lulie Gibbons and Mary Rigg. Reports on the year’s work will be given by committee chairmen, and entertainment will be given by members of the blue and white nominating committee. FALL’S SON-IN-LAW DIES Divorced Husband of His Daughter Succumbs in Virginia. By United Press Fredericksburg, Va., July 16. Brandt Elliott who was divorced some years ago from Jouett Fall, daughter of former Secretary of Interior Albert B. Fall, died Wednesday night at Wcodlawn, his King George country home. He is survived by his divorced wife and a daughter who is with her in El Paso, Tex. SHRINE SELECTS FRISCO 1932 Convention to Be Held on Coast; Chicago Fails to Bid. By United Press CLEVELAND. July 16.—The imperial council of the North American Shrine selected San Francisco as the 1932 convention city today as the fifty-seventh annual convention neared adjournment. The selection was made by acclamation after Chicago had failed to make a bid as originally expected. MARY HENDERSON IS ON HONEYMOON Mrs. Alpha Henderson, 1961 Broadway, has announced the marriage of their daughter, Mary Henderson, to Howard Beasley, Alexandria, which took place Tuesday morning at the home. Mr. and Mrs. Beasley have left for a wedding trip to Chicago and w’ill make their home in Alexandria. Society Woman, 90, Is 111 BAR HARBOR, Me.. July 16. Mrs. John Brooks Henderson, elderly Washington society woman, and widow of the late United States senator from Missouri, is ill seriously with apoplexy at her summer home here, but doctors reported today that although she is 90 years old. she may recover.

These are the big sticky bubbles of shampoo. These are the fine bubbles CastileShampoo. Big frothy bubbles are showy. But its the fine bubbles that reach the dirt. No wonder Laco Castile Shampoo .. fhszT ' leaves your hair gloriously beautiful. ALd&k LACO If H (SaAtile- Scrap yU SHAMPOO The penetrating fine-bubble shampoo that washes and rinses perfectly

amuse. Many others, equally or even more decorative, serve useful purposes as well. Cigarette boxes are no longer just a place to keep cigarettes. They're of shining brass or copper, of oldfashioned looking porcelain, of gay potteries, of alabaster or of colorful compositions to make a small, bright note in the room’s color scheme. Ash trays are decorative, too. Some have modernistic figures perched on the side for a handle, or they sit on the backs of strange animals, or are simple in shape, but brilliant in color. The book ends that hold your favorite volumes in a neat row are often moulded into human or animal figures or decorated with old fashioned scenes or portraits. Metal Important Fashion Metal is growing to be an important fashion in these decorative objects. The gray of pewter, the tawny gleam of copper and the golden shine of brass can do most interesting things to a room if placed right. Where they catch the sunlight or firelight, for instance. You’ll find these metals used in all sorts of things—smoking sets, book ends, flower holders, trays and jugs. The pewter plates and pitchers like the ones illustrated adorn more bookcases and mantels than they do dining tables, these decorative days. Tole Is Smart The fashionable tole is metal, too, though it’s painted over in classic French colorings and designs, like the wall bracket and flower pot

White urn and toby jug.

China cigaret box and metal ash

tray.

Pewter plate and pitcher.

Silhouette book ends and tolc bracket and vase.

illustrated. Tole trays and flower containers can be made useful, of course, but they’re decorative even when not in actual use. White is effectively used in small decorative bits. A white porcelain urn, for example, such as the one sketched. White boxes for cigarets . . . ivory-framed miniatures or silhouettes. Those Victorian Staffordshire dogs illustrated are white. Masques Novel A rather novel decorative object recently arrived in fashion is the masque of pottery or metal, with classic features or exotic modern ones. Fruits of porcelain and glass in natural colorings or unusual ones are smart decorations for the dining room. And there's no stigma attached today to using artificial flow’ers. They are some of the most fashionable, individual deocrative objects there are! (Copyright. 1931. bv Amos Parrish) Next: Useful little accessories for the summer wardrobe arc discussed by Amos Parrish.

FREE FREE FINGER WAVE—MARCEL BRING TKIS COIF ON 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. Lincoln 0432

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

DAIRY ‘BOYCOTT FORCES USE OF MILKJOUSES Refusal to Buy Effective Weapon Under State Requirements. More than 5,000 standard approved milk houses have been built by Indiana dairymen on their farms since April, it was asserted today by Frank C. Wilson, director of the department of dairy products of the state board of health. Reason for this unusual increase in facilities for caring for milk is that firms buying milk and cream have refused to accept products from farms that are not thus provided. Such milk houses long have been among the requirements for dairies as laid down in the health department rules. Refusal to purchase, however, has been the most effective weapon in putting over the board of health program, Wilson asserted. Due to the improved conditions Indiana milk and cream shipments are now being admitted in out of state cities and in other states where previously banned. A milk house is provided with water coolers to keep down bacteria development. Drop in revenues of the dairy products has caused the department to make plans to put the milk inspection costs under the new budget, rather than finance it by fees as in the past. The new budget will go into effect Oct. 1. At that time the inspectors’ salaries, already approved by the state budget committee, will be paid from department funds. Creek Stocked With Fish By Times Special ANDERSON, lnd., July 16—Two thousand small-mouth black bass sent here from the state fish hatchery were placed in Killbuck creek by Madison county chapter of the Izaak Walton League.

. • \ This picture w r as taken Monday morning. July 13. It shows Just , \ iiffffPWßEW' a P ortion of the Furniture that has been sold and ready for delivery. 5 \ Extra salespeople, extra warehouse employes, extra trucks have v y'- V ••„ •• \ been sufficiently increased to give the public our usual satisfactory $O Es -95 co7s S te. ee wagons y S $ 0.98 foot extension table with lai* price, $5.45. Sale center folding leaf. Regular f W f p. • . a ■ -"Atwater Kent" Radio- price 5129.50. Sale Price.... Model No. list IQO All ~ —A large selection of miscellaneous toys—too price, $139.20. Sale Price.. Aril tfA AII-1 lie 13.1 lOIQ 111 g numerous to mention—have been reduced to un(Complete With Tubes; yjg §g jJjaU'W Card Table Chairs with tkjf Ikjr believable Fire Sale Prices in our Basement Toy Easy Terms! ifr*® 1 iw ■, ~ i. -n ’WL • Department, no interest—No carrying H H '"'W leatherette seats. Kegu- ______ , charges. lar price, $1.39. Sale price 26-Pc. Dinner Set—Com- iq I—Lot “Gesso” Bridge ._. I^.. plete service for four Sp g Parchment Lamp MATTRESSES QC So°cn le T P e f> u ! a1 ’ P rice > 1 Shades, regular $2.95, Regular price, # $0.89. Sale Price a Sale Price $10.75. Sale Price, ■ "™“™ 1 11—Walnut veneered * Q r Console Mirror with neat <t. ** fto while they last.. ■ RTeukTnrice' C—- etching and polychrome p 1 •££ 24-Inner-Spring SS-sSte”: 3* Sr-, p "": 1 umms „„ _ hoM ed Krtabte SAA 75 *- Lot of Walnut Humi- QO 51 | Lounge Chair and Otto- Bn I>IU1 >IU dor Smokers, complete §. <3 O by layers of cotton 1 ■ " man. Regular price, W mwmum with smoking set. RegU- # “Regular price ■ ■ $42.50. Sale Price.... lar price, $5.95. Sale price &&& Sw J ~ All Sales Final —Absolutely No Exchanges! If You Haven’t an Account—Open One Tomorrow —It’s Easy to Pay the People’s Way! —Cbt r?L. 133-135 West Washington Street Opposite the Indiana Theater

Radio Dial Twisters

WFBM (1230) Indianapolis (loAimtolli Power and Unlit Comoanj) THURSDAY P. M. 5:30—Rollo and Dad (CBS). 5:45 —Camel ouarter hour (CBS'. 6:00 —Arthur Prvor's band (CBS'. 6:ls—Columbians (CBS). 7:oo—Premier Chefs (CBS'. 7:ls—Boswell Sisters (CBS). 7:3o—Dr. Henry B. Longden. 7 45—Household entertainer*. 8:00 —Lewisohn stadium concert (CBS!. 8:30 to 10—Silent. . _ . . 10:00 —Guy Lombardo and Royal Canadians (CBS). 10:30—The columnist. 10:45—Nocturne (CBS). WKBF (1400) ~~ Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Ine.) — I THURSDAY P. M. 4:4s—News Flashes. s:oo—Crystal studio. s:ls—The Horae Towner. s:2s—Crazy Crystal Man. s:3o—Gloom Chasers. s:sß—Baseball results. 6:oo—Golden Hour of Music. 6:3o—Orchestra 6:4s—Dr. Morgan's health talk. 7:oo—Earl Burtnett program. 3:ls—Smiling Ed McConnell. 7:4s—Business Chat. B:oo—Studio orchestra. B:3o—Concert trio with Ruth Otte. 9:oo—Confessions of a Racketeer. B:ls—Hawaiian Melodies 9:3o—Germania orchestra. 10:00—Sports review. 10:05—Showboat orchestra. 10:30—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati THURSDAY 4:ls—Wilderson’s Wildcats. 4:29—Time. 4:3o—Jim and Walt. 4:4s—Lowell Thomas (NBC). s:oo—Amos ’n’ Andy (NBC'. s:ls—Tastyeast Jesters (NBC). F:3o—Dr. Glenn Adams dog talk, 6:oo—Baseball scores. 6:os—The Chatter. 6:ls—Rin-Tin-Tin Thriller (NBC). 6:3o—Netherland Plaza orchestra. 7:oo—Varsity Four. 7:ls—Murray Horton’s orchestra. 7:30 —Castilian Nights. B:oo—Henry Busse’s orchestra. B:3o—Clara. Lu and Em (NBC'. 8:45 —Glenn Sisters and Ramona. 9:oo—Henry Ties’ orchestra. 9:3o—Variety. 9:45—80b NefWhall. 9:sß—Weather. 10:00 —Great composers. 11:00—Moon River. 11:30—Henry Busse’s orchestra. 12:00 Midnight—Netherland Plaza orchestra. A. M. 12:30 Sign off. Thief Wanted Watch By Times Special ANDERSON, lnd., July 16—A thief who ransacked the suburban residence of Ervin F. Miller, architect, took only a gold watch. Other valuable articles were not molested.

U. S. PLANTS IN CANADA GAIN BY AUSTRALIA PACT Dominion’s Agreement Seen New Blow to America’s Foreign Trade. By Seripps-Haward N'ci espaper Alliance WASHINGTON, July 16—While the New Canada-Australia trade agreement is seen as another blow ; to the dwindling foreign trade of ; the United States, it is likely to prove a boom to these American manufacturers who own branch plants in Canada, it is said here. The movement of branch factories from the States to Canada has been a major development in the past five years. Today, according to department of commerce estimates, investments in these branches in Canada total more than $500,000,000. They include factories for making tires, cash registers, farm machinery, chemicals and other exportable goods. The “substantial tariff preference’’ Canada will enjoy under the agreement will aid Americans who i manufacture in Canada. For ininstance the auto manufacturers with branch factories in Canada will profit by a preferential on auto chasses unassembled of 15 per cent as compared with the former rate of 22% per cent and the rate against the United States of 32% per cent. According to Premier R. B. Bennett’s announcement to the Ottawa house of commons, Canada will be in a position to supply a large percentage of the $300,000,000 worth of goods Australia annually buys from other countries. Reciprocally, Parker Moloney, Australian minister of markets, said that the new agreement should aid the two domonions “to do business with one another which at the present time is being done with foreign countries.” While Australia at the present is not a good buying market because of the financial stress there due to low wheat, wool and dairy product prices, certain American exporters will feel the effects of the agree-

ment. Under the agreement, Canada gets a $5 a 1.000-feet preference on lumber the preference on canned salmon Increases from 3 cents to 6 cents per pound and x>n newsprint from sls to S2O per ton. Thus western industries may be affected seriously. Blast Follows Fire By Times Spcciql WABASH, lnd., July 16—Firemen were thrown off their feet when gas exploded at a battery shop as they were extinguishing the last sparks of a fire in ths place. The fire caused only slight damage, but loss due to the explosion is estimated at $2,000.

Here’s A Red Hot Tip For Men With Big Waistlines—Fat Men Safe Way To Get Rid of Surplus Fat and At the Same Time Gain In Vigor, Energy and Mental Activity—Feel Younger.

*_W YORK MAN TELLS CONCISE STORY Yes, Gentlemen: Writes W. R. Daniels of Richmond Hill—"I have finished my second bottle of Kruschen Salts and have obtained the following results:” 1— “i have removed 3 inches from the belt line. 2 ‘ Get up in the morning feeling 100 per cent. 3 “I am 25% more active. 4 “My mind is clearer. 5 “My wind has improved 25%. 6 “All skin eruptions have disappeared. 7 “My face and lips have color. 8— “When I go to bed I am motionless —sleep like a brick. 9 “Am 46 years old and feel 20 years younger.” Millions of men the world over are taking the little daily dose of Kruschen because they know that it keeps them everlastingly feeling fit and active—life really becomes a glorious adventure well worth living. Don’t confuse Kruschen with the ordinary salts that are made for just one purpose (to act on the bowels), and don’t take them with the idea that they possess reducing qualities in themselves.

PAGE 7

BOTTLE TRAVELS FAR Distance of Nearly 300 Mile Covered to Reach Ohio River. By Timet Special CHARLOTTESVILLE. Ind., July 16—A bottle containing a slip of paper bearing his name and address which Lothair Parker, 14, dropped into Six Mile creek near here April 1. has brought a reply from Miss Elizabeth Lewis, Huntington, W. ; Va. She did not state where she found the bottle, but it is presumed | it was picked up at some point in the Ohio river below the mouth of the Wabash. To reach the Ohio, the bottle traveled nearly 300 miles.

Keep everlastingly before you the fact that Kruschen contains the six salts that your body should possess if you are to be gloriously alivehealthy. How would you like to get your weight down to normal and at the same time develop that urge for activity that makes work a pleasure and also gain in ambition and keenness of mind? Get on the scales to-day and see bow much you weigh—then get an 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts which will last you for 4 weeks. Take onehalf teaspoonful in a glass of hot water every morning—cut down on sweets for a while—take the exercise which Kruschen will induce —persist in this method every morning of your life and when you have finished the contents of this first bottle weigh yourself again. Now you can laugh at the pejple who pay hundreds of dollars to lose a few pounds of fat—now you will know the pleasant way to lose unsighßy fat and you'll also know that the 6 mineral salts of Kruschen (Salts that your blood, nerves and glands should have to function properly)—have presented you with glorious health. After that you'll want to walk around and say to your friends.—'‘One 85 cent bottle of Kruschen Salts iff worth one hundred dollars of any fat person’s money.” Leading druggists all over the world sell Kruschen Salts —you can always get, it at Hook’s Dependable Drug Stores, who sell dozens of packages every week. Try one bottle with the understanding that if not joyfully satisfied—money back. —Advertisement.