Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 79, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1931 — Page 10
PAGE 10
A. Day’s Menu i Breakfast — Blueberries, cereal, cream, I . creamid cottage ham j with broiled tomatoes, ( toaat, milk, coflee. * * * Luncheon — j Duck and celery salad, ! hot ice-box rolls, -each ! and orange marmalade, I Irish moss pudding with j raspberries, milk, tea. Dinner — Boiled calf's tongue on a j bed of steamed spinach, j savory creamed carrots, i frozen banana salad, | toasted crackers, cheese, ! milk, coflee. -Bv Sarah Field Splint in McCall’s j for September. \ I
Miss Maze Will Honor Bride-Elect Miss Lucile Maze will entertain tonight at her home, 3605 Balsam avenue, with a bridge party and lingerie shower in honor of Miss Glen Hanning, whose marriage to Walker B. Knotts will take place Aug. 31 at the North Methodist Episcopal church. Miss Maze will be assisted by her sister, Miss Zona Maze. Turquoise, coral, and eggshell, the bride-elect’s chosen colors, will form the color note for the decorations and appointments. The three tables will be covered at serving time with cloths in the three colors, with a center plateau of summer flowers, and lighted tapers to correspond. Guests will be: Mesdames W. H. Hanning, mother of the bride-elect: A. P. Birchett, J. D. Snarks. E. M. Attkisson. Gerald McDermott, Howard Kiser. Misses Jane Allison. Thelma Caldwell. Helen Cadle. Bermodlne Eesrert. Edna Colburn and Virginia Bugbee. Miss Hanning is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Hanning, 909 East Maple road. The bridegroomelect is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Knotts, 3515 North Capitol avennt. Ohio Woman to Be Honored by Local League Mrs. Caroline Brandt, Columbus, 0.. president of the Columbus League for the Hard of Hearing, will be honored at a reception to be given tonight by the local league at the clubrooms in the Stokes ' building. A regular meeting of the group will precede the reception, and the practice class will meet at 7:30. While in Indianapolis, Mrs. Brandt is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stackhouse, 3510 North Meridian street.
Card Parties
Mrs. Hannah Welch is in charge of the card party to be given by the Altar Society of St. Philip Neri parish at 8:30 Wednesday night in the auditorium, 535 Eastern avenue. Circles 1 and 2 of St. Anthony’s church will sponsor a supper from 5:30 to 8 Wednesday night at the hall, 397 North Warman avenue, followed by cards at 8:30. Victory Club will entertain with a luncheon and card party at noon Thursday at the home of Mrs. Darwin Hiatt, 1322 North Sherman drive. St. Mary’s Social Club will entertain at cards and lotto Thursday night in the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street. Hostesses will be Mesdames Harry Arzmann, John Betz, Francis Roth and Elizabeth Feiner. The social club of Sacred Heart church will play bunco and lotto at 2:15 Thursday in the hall, 1512 Union street. Winema Social Club will give a euchre and bunco party at 8:30 tonight in Red Men's hall, Seventeenth street and Roosevelt avenue. STATE PAIR WEDS AT NEW PALESTINE Marriage of Miss Catherine McCullough. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCullough, New Palestine, to the Rev. Herschell Reed, pastor of the New Palestine Christian church, which took place Saturday in New Palestine, has been announced. The Rev. J. T. Gwinn, Indianapolis, officiated. Both the bride and bridegroom attended Butler university. Mr. Reed formerly was pastor of the Forty-Ninth Street Christian church in Indianapolis. They have gone to Boston on a wedding trip. Mrs. Berry to Be Hostess Mrs. Jack Berry will be hostess for the business meeting of the Alpha chapter. Omega Phi Tau sorority. Wednesday night at her home, 2539 College avenue. All members are urged to be present.
Rumor That Tunneys Expect Heir Persists
By United Press DAMARISCOTTA, Me., Aug. 11.—Lincoln Memorial hospital officials refused today to confirm recurrent rumors that Mrs. Gene Tunney was an expectant mother and had been at the institution for the last week. Mrs. Tunney and her husband, the former world heavyweight boxing champion, have been spending the summer at the home of her mother. Mrs. George Lauder Jr. of Greenwich, Conn., on Johns island, two miles from Christmas Cove. Both the ex-champion and Mrs. Lauder have visited the hospital several times recently, it was reported. Hospital authorities stated Monday Mrs. Tunney was not at the Institution and had not been there, but reports to the contrary persisted today. •
QUAINT STYLES CHALLENGE PESSIMISM
Fall Models Convey Look of Opulence BY ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA Service Writer PARIS, Aug. 11.—There are many thrills for the feminine world in the latest ideas of the Paris couturiers, but one thing certain is that they will not make the mistake of trying to foist crinolines, bustles or any of the other sartorial atrocities of the Victorian era on modem women. Fall fashions usually express themselves in terms of street clothes in the average woman’s mind. Evening clothes come after. There is a very definite sense of satisfaction in the first wearing of an autumn coat dress or coat, just as spring is synonymous with jaunty, gaily colored tailleurs. We already know that the next season’s street clothes will show an art in fur trimming more lavish, luxurious and flattering than has ever yet been seen within living memory. The old, stereotyped idea of a straight fur collar, more or less voluminous, and cuffs that could never be mistaken for anything else, will have to be forgotten. Advance fall models show fur trimmings that were never meant to impart any idea of comfort or even warmth. They just convey a prosperous, opulent look which can be taken as a direct challenge to the present wave of pessimism. Cloth Dresses the Rage Cloth coat dresses are a certain feature of fall fashions that no woman can afford to overlook. There is something very attractive about a beautifully tailored coat dress and a judicious touch of fur at the neck or sleeves or in both places. The first lightweight coats have bands of fur simulating a jacket. These models, which at first sight could be mistaken for a suit, promise soon to be all the rage. Fitted silhouettes are a sure bet too, so far as fall coat styles are concerned, and this will create an altogether different line. This fitted top will be further accentuated by the decidedly more voluminous sleeves, a trend which started last winter when much of a coat’s detail was concentrated on Its sleeve. And the quaint, old-fashioned look of these styles will be further enhanced by the reappearance on the scene of fashions of fabrics like ribbed velvet, ribbed silk, heavy surahs and others. New Hats Responsible There is a very considerable change to be noted too, in the nature of fur trimming. All fiat furs like galliac, broadtail, pony and shaved lamb are being superseded by the more expensive sable, lynx, fox and that newcomer, leopard. Asa matter of fact, just as flattering an effect can be achieved with a mere touch of a really highclass fur than with an over-abund-ance of some second-rate skin and the originality and chic of a model will reside more in the originality of the trimming than in its bulk. It is extraordinary how in the short lapse of a few weeks the whole of the happy-go-lucky, casual epoch as suddenly came to an end. Os course the new hats are responsible and the fact that all women are in a perfect fever to adopt them and are wearing them shows that they have been produced at a psychological moment. Hair-Dress Varies Ostrich plumes gently waving in the wind, coque feathers fascading down one side of the face, velvet ribbon trimmings, flowers, all these are features that call for and harmonize perfectly with sable, mink and other rich furs. The evening, or restaurant hat, is \\ith us again and not in the shape of a bejewelled cap, more or less diminutive, that has been tentatively offered during the last two or three seasons and very rarely seen, but a real, formal hat, complete with ostrich feather or the rarer osprey. All sorts of new hairdressing fashions are also being launched at the moment, the trend being distinctly divided between the semilong adepts and the short-hair effect with wisps of varying length and patterns plastered on the cheeks in the fashion of the First Empire. Naturally the new hats demand an impeccable coiffure, especially on the side that is disclosed by the tilted brim effect. Omega Chi to Meet ' Omega Chi sorority will meet at at 8:30 Wednesday night at Broad Ripple park. 4-H SHOW IS ARRANGED Many Exhibits to Be Displayed at State Fairground. Two thousand garments made by girls and baking, canning and vegetable exhibits wall be included in displays to be shown Wednesday at fourth annual Marion county 4-H Club shows and fair at the state fairground. Future farmers and homemakers of the county also will exhibit several hundred heads of cattle. Judging of clothing and livestock exhibits are included on the program with awards to be announced at 1:30 p. m. Settlers to Picnic Aug. 20 Annual outing of old settlers of Marion county will be held Aug. 20 at Broad Ripple park, E. S. Boardman announced today.
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There’s a hint of the Victorian era—but only a hint—in the new products of the Parish fashion shops. Left—A beige patterned woolen is used by Jacques Heim for an early fall wrap trimmed with dark brown astra khan; the belt is of matching brown suede. Upper Center—Molyneux’s latest creation in hats is expressed here in a mauve felt trimmed with “plumes de coq” shaded to match. Lower Center—another new hat by Molyneux is fashioned of soft black felt and has a back trimming of white marabout. Right—Black velvet styles a formal afternoon coat trimmed wfith ermine.
‘Eugenie Hats’ Have Disrupted Dress Industry By United Press ST. LOUIS, Aug. 11.—The Empress Eugenie mode in fall hats disrupted the dress manufacturing industry, the American Retailers Association was informed today. The hat, which is cocked jauntily on one side of the head, was such an innovation, according s to Michael Levy, the convention’s style pageant director, that it dictated, what dresses were to be worn—a reversal of custom. “Manufacturers plan six months in advance,” Levy s&id, “and they had their fall campaigns set with dresses quite unfitting to be worn with Empress Eugenie hats. Women insisted on the new mode in hats, so entire stocks of dresses had to be scrapped.”
BRIDE IN EAST
. . " I V. * 1 I J
Mrs. Roy Plummer —Photo by Kindred. Mrs. Roy Plummer was Miss Gladys Bechtold before her recent marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Plummer are on a wedding trip through the east.
*z- t bother any siteirX with that old iron p SHT" It will have to be rffiliirrrl^ <J ~ before long anyway. Bring It In .• . regardless" of WhaV kind or fn T '^lit T con'dltipn^ll!j| ' may be ... or let us send for it, and we will allow you one dollar. 4 ? Pay the balance as follows: Only 95c, down, then SI.OO pee. month until paid for, for this splendid, new, Improved American Beauty" adjustable automatic electric iron The best iron made' *• I. -t Before long yourw!M.have to get a hew Iron so do It now while | you earn get aii'atlowance for your old one.— 2 Stores INDIANAPOLIS Washington I Monument POWER & LIGHT “ a n d“: I]
HINT SLIGHTLY OF. MODES OF, VICTORIAN ERA
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave A. Recker, 129 East Nineteenth street, and Miss Alice Miller, have returned fiom a vacation at Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Clifford Arrick, 3419 North Pennsylvania street, has returned from a six weeks’ visit in the east. Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Pape and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hoatson and daughter are spending two weeks at Lake WawaStee. Dr. and Mrs. Murray N. Hadley and son David, 3132 North New Jersey street, are vacationing at Walloon lake, Michigan. Miss Elizabeth Hughes is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Porteus and daughter Gene, at their summer cottage on Lake Wawasee. Mrs. Robert Dtvy Eaglesfield, 3061 North Meridian street, has gone to Richmond, Va.> to be the guest of Mrs. Henry Watterson Ellison. William Beher, Rushville, is on a motor trip through Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. Mrs. L. H. Osterhage, 3751 North Meridian street, and Mrs. J. A. Warrender, 57 East Maple road, have gone to Beach Wood Point, Waterville, Mich., for a week. Mrs. Effie Schoen-Morgan, 5744 North New Jersey street, will sail from New York Wednesday for a month in Europe. Mrs. F. J. Wright, Memphis, Tenn., is the house guest of her sister, Mrs. Edna S. Severin, Golden Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weinberg, 24 East Fifty-third street, has as their guests over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. Martin Roese and Miss Molly Weinberg, Rogers Park, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Myer Greenfield and daughter Sylvia, Maywood, 111. Miss Weinberg will remain to spend a month as their house guest. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Kutchback, 2324 Ashland avenue, and their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beck, North Vernon, Ind., have left by motor for Minneapolis, where they will visit Mr. and Mrs. Kutchback’s son, H. L s Kutchback and Mrs. Kutchback.
Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Rudesill, and children Helen and Robert, 3941 North Delaware street, have re-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
turned from a month’s vacation, spent at Conover, Wis. Miss Dorothy Paul Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Jackson, 3534 East Fall Creek boulevard, is visiting in Marblehead, Mass. She wil go from there to New York to visit her uncle, Emil Seidel. Miss Ida Belle Sweenie, 118 West Twenty-first street, and Mrs. Frank T. Edenharter, 3345 North Illinois street, are spending the week in Detroit.
Sister-in-Law to Be Feted by Mrs. Ressler Mrs. Edwin P. Ressler, 1402 North Pennsylvania street, will entertain at the Marott hotel today with a luncheon bridge, honoring her sister-in-law, Miss Lucille Ressler, Chicago, who is her house guest. A color scheme of yellow and green will be carried out in the luncheon appointments, and the table decorations of summer flowers. Guests will include: Mesd&mes Pail McNamara, John Silver, Victor Mttssawarr. Robert Beard, Chet Decker. Kenneth Collins. A. B. Whittemore. Ellsworth Reid, Misses Marie Hutton, Ruth Duffy, and Isabelle Guedelhoefer.
Credit
The picture of Miss Ruth Peterson and her house guest, Miss Dorothy Peterson, which appeared on the society page of Saturday’s Times should have been credited to Dexheimer studio. Parish Fete Opens Holy Name parish of Beech Grove will open its lawn fete tonight. Wednesday, chicken dinner will be served from 5 to 7 by the Altar Society. The lawn fete will close on Thursday evening.
GLEN CRAIG TO BE BRIDE AT CHURCH Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Craig, 5847 Forest lane, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Glen Ethyl Craig, to Leon R. Smythe, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Smythe, 3142 Bellefontaine street. The wedding will take place Friday afternoon at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church. Mrs. Roy L. Davidson, 4823 Central avenue, entertained Friday at her home with a miscellaneous shower in honor of Miss Craig.
| Just for Wednesday! These Real Values! HTSale! Dr™"™" FOOTWEAR* style and service, choose m ( Dr. Hale’s Arch Support /§p§|[ mtk ' 'V Footwear at a saving now. | MESH HOSIERY ] I 10 Iji KREX RUGS •> Women’s first quality mesh 5 |§ ~v aii r# H jl 9x12 Krex Rugs. i’ S hose. Reve, sendee M ■ j! modern! s t i c <> tendresse, allure *| Q j g DRESSES lij OQO i| > motense | L ■ ||S v j||j cd at half the *r CjQ !> \ Star Store-First Floor. M & AP Mi re ? ular P™e.. W ==== ;’ > > H om METtM rS M > star store—Third Floor. I $1.50 to $3.00 .' H 3HK 9 Boys’ Palm T ANARUS, °! RSE ! 5 ,.. I U I • I make. Salesmen’s sam- H Included are most of cloth, also imported linples of stenins ■ the better summer silk M ens - Broken lots and arounds and P ’ P H dres6es in stock - Abl e m sizes, but all sizes in the lip corset P j| 9 assortment of ’ lovely gig lot. Sizes rnntn hrnrho afa 1 9 Prints and plain colors. 6to 17 Arm Sf% Sand ' SI 9 SIKS for *' omtn 1 UUp M sX ... W I 9 misses. ;S $1.59 to ] . Star Store—Second Floor Second Floor. jfiL star Store—First Floor. .1 f Bleached Sheets T $3.95 DRESSES ■ 81x90-Inch, made of good mgg H' weight sheeting, deep llZ" %j| 9 ®j| || P® hems and seamless. 79c ■J TO I w.. .wrfc— nud
Tired? Then Bathe Often in Summer BY ALICIA HART Reams are written in summer time about vacations. But what, I ask you, about the majority of folks who have to stay home? Shouldn’t they have some consideration and help? They should. They rate more than those lucky ones who spend the summer at seaside or mountain, or traveling here and there. Cleanliness probably Is the sweetest asset any office or business girl can have. Any one who advocated the daily bath in this enlightened age would be laughed at. But you really should double that daily bath in summer time. Refreshes Humor A nice, hot, sudsy tub bath when you come home exhausted, discouraged. You’ll be surprised how it seems to spruce up your sense of humor to get thoroughly cleansed again. Finish off with cold water if you will. But don’t scorn the hot tub! The morning shower, of course. It is almost more necessary than the tooth brush. Otherwise, how can any one get her courage up enough to get dressed to go to work? Here is where you can give yourself a little boost for your ego. Invest in some very lovely toilet water. Not too sweet a brand—something clean, cool, nice smelling. And some very soft and flattering bath powder. Use them both, and see if they don t inspire you to put on your lingerie and frock and step, in lively fashion, for the street car or subway! Spruce Up for Lunch The bath out of the way and -he day partly done, why net take a few minutes from the lunch hour for sprucing? Don’t drag yourself out and get a mean little sandwich and feel like an unfortunate slave. Take a few minutes, take off your blouse if you can and scrup up—with soap and water. Use the end of your towel and actually wash behind your ears. Then use a little cream, put on fresh make-up, fix your hair up and see if you don’t come nearer having rosy glasses on when you start to lunch. Last, but almost most important, don’t eve r try to keep a date for dinner or the evening without making a desperate effort to get a bath and change your things. If you can’t get home, you at least can slip off your outer garments and sponge and slip off your shoes and stockings and sponge your feet. This will freshen you up no end.
.AUG. 11,1931
Daily Recipe j SPANISH STEAK 2 pounds round steak 6 small onions 1 green pepper, chopped j 1 clove garlic, chopped j 1 cup canned or cooked I tomatoes, drained 1 cup canned or cooked | peas * m m Dredge steak with salt, ! pepper and flour and brown | on both sides in a little fat. I Remove from pan, put in pep- ] per and garlic and cook for 5 j minutes. Put meat in heavy j pan and spread pepper and j garlic over it. Add onions j and tomatoes, cover and cook ! until onions and meat are j tender. j Shortly before meat is dope | add peas and more seasoning j if necessary. Arrange on j platter with vegetables on . j j and surround with border of j potato puffs.
House Party Planned hy State Clubs Indiana Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs will hold its third annual Labor day house party Sept. 5, 6 and 7 at. West Baden. State officers ara making arrangements for the outing, which also was held at Wesfr Baden last year. A number of members of the In* dianapolis club are planning to aU tend. Miss Alma R. Kampe is chairman of summer activities of the local club, and asks that all making the trip by motor and who have room for extra passengers notitfy her. The local club closed its year's activities late in the spring. The opening fall meeting will be held Sept. 24, when program plans for the winter will be announced. Mis* Lucy Osborn is president of the Indianapolis club.
FREE —FREE FINGER WAVE—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. Lincoln 0432
