Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 216, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 January 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Vote League Is Studying Child Care First of a series of discussion Meetings will be held by the child welfare committee of the Indianapolis League of Women Voters at 10 Wednesday at Rauh Memorial Library. Miss Bertha Leming, assistant director of the social service department of public schools will be in charge of each meeting. Mrs. G. H. A. Clowes and Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr., will report on cars of dependent and neglected children. Members of the committee under the direction of the chairman, Mrs. J. J. Daniels, have spent the past year Investigating public welfare institutions where dependents or delinquents are confined. In addition to the survey of local Institutions members also have been engaged in a study of practices and experiences of other states and communities in caring for children. The purpose of the study group !s to give to members of the study class a clear picture of the situation regarding all phases of public child welfare work in Indianapolis and Marion county. The group will make recommendations go for improvement and co-ordination of sources now available.
Sisterhood to Mark Founding With Luncheon ~ Indianapolis council of the P. E. O. Sisterhood will celebrate the founding of the organization with a luncheon at 1 Saturday at the Severin. The council is composed of representatives of the five chapters in Indianapolis, F, G, P, Q and S. Mrs. Arthur L. Strauss of Chapter G, president of the council, is general chairman for the luncheon. State officers and members of the other state chapters have been invited to attend. A play, “A P. E.'O.’s Dream,” will be presented under the direction of Miss Clara Ryan. The leading parts will be taken by Miss Marian Fiscus, Miss Mary Whitmyre and Mrs. W. B. Ward. Today is the last day for making reservations. DEVICE GIVES FACE DRY ICE MASSAGE Now you can give your face an Invigorating ice bath without unpleasantly cold trickles down the neck. A chromium egg-shaped gadget with colored handle is filled with a liquid solution that freezes quickly and remains cold throughout a treatment. It’s kept in the refrigerator when not in use and is soothing for headaches, tired eyes or wherever a cooling application is wanted. VOGUE IS STRONG FOR OCEAN PEARL Ocean pearl is having quite a vogue in buttons, belt buckles, clips and various kinds of flat trimmings on dresses. It’s especially smart used on washable dresses, since ocean pearl, being a water product, can stand numerous trips to the laundry without losing luster or strength. The pearl is now being colored in smart sports shades to use on white or colored dresses. Cafteria Parties Successful hostesses this winter are finding it easy for them and pleasant for their guests when they arrange a table with the makings and let guests help themselves. Plates of horse d’oeuvres, different kinds of cheese, sliced cold cuts, fillers for sandwiches, new and fancy crackers and sliced bread should be arranged artistically and plates, knives and spoons stacked lip for guests to help themselves. Call Chapter Session Beta chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will meet Tuesday night at the home of Miss Elizabeth Presnail, 19 West Twenty-seventh street. Hostess to Club Mrs. Karl M. Koons, 3720 North Pennsylvanita street, will be hostess for a luncheon meeting of the Indiana Wellesley Club at 12:30 Friday, Jan. 20, at her home. Reservations may be made with her. Mrs . Rush Hostess Mrs. Arthur Rush, 217 West Thir-ty-sixth street, will be hostess for a business meeting of Alpha chapter. Theta Chi Omega sorority, Monday night. Fraternity to Meet Amigos Club will meet at 8:15 tonight at the home of Raymond Monaghan, 243 North State avenue. James Galladay will preside. Zonta Club to Meet Zonta Club will meet Tuesday noon for luncheon at the Columbia Club. Miss Bess Robbins, attorney, will lead a current events discussion. Sigma Phis to Meet Sigma Phi Delta sorority will meet at 8 Wednesday night at the home of Miss Virginia Holman, 1001 College avenue. Officers will be elected.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Tangerines, cereal, cream, coddled eggs, reheated rolls, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream peppers stuffed with rice and cheese, stewed tomatoes, molasses cookies, milk, tea. Dinner — English mutton chops, creamed potatoes, parsnip patties, raw turnip and lettuce salad, cornstarch pudding with strawberry sauce, milk, coffee.
Women Bowlers of City Will Get Free Lessons
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Every Indianapolis woman interested in bowling will have opportunity this week for free expert instruction in the healthy art of sending the tenpins spinning for strikes and spares. The Times free bowling school, conducted in co-operation with owners of the Parkway, Fountain Square and Uptown alleys, will open Friday and continue through Jan. 28, hours of classes to be announced in the enrollment blank which will be printed in The Times Tuesday. Entrants, whether beginners or more experienced bowlers, will be taught the fine points of the game
Mrs. Duck to Be Hostess at Benefit Bridge Alumnae of Smith college in Indianapolis will play bridge this afternoon at the home of Mrs. Berkeley Duck, 5111 North Meridian street, for the benefit of the school’s scholarship fund. Miss Anna H. Spann will be joint hostess with her sister, Mrs. Duck. Baskets of flowers will be used in decorating. Reservations have been made for twelve tables. Mesdames Stacey D. Lindley, Theodore B. Griffith, J. F. Carroll. Frank. J. Hoke. Charles F. Meyer Jr.. Clyde A. wands and Miss Eunice Dissette.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Le Forgee have returned to Chicago following a visit with Mrs. Nicholson Claypool, 5417 North Meridian street. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fairbanks, 5700 Sunset lane, and Mrs. Hensley Holliday, will spend the remainder of the winter in Miami. Mrs. A. W. Early, 2625 North Meridian street, is wintering in Southern California, and is at the Maryland hotel, Pasadena. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Beach are at the Roosevelt in New York for a few days. I. R. Whiting, 1318 South Lyndhurst drive, is vacationing in Miami, Fla., and is at the Hotel Everglades. Mr. and Mrs. 'William Herschell Skinner, 2141 Central avenue, spent the week-end with his parents in Bloomington. Among those from Indianapolis registered at the Waldorf Astoria in New York are Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Hunter, C. C. Dibble,- 2000 North Delaware street, and W. A. IvfayeS,' 3766 North Pennsylvania street.
Card Parties
Mrs. Catherine Smock is general chairman of a card party to be held at Modern Woodmen’s hall, 1025 Prospect street, at 2:15 Tuesday. Her committee includes Mesdames Frank Ulrich, Sherman Conner and Florence Baase. A bunco party will be held in Holy Rosary hall, 520 Stevens street, at 8 Tuesday night for benefit of Holy Rosary church. A. W. T. Embroidery Club, Degree of Pocahontas, will give a card party Tuesday night at the Bond Baking Company, 326 West Vermont street. The committee in charge is Mesdames Margaret Foster, Louise Hale, Nelle Hobbs, Isabelle Kiefer and Ada Mann. Chapter to Entertain Kappa Delta Theta sorority will entertain Wednesday night at the home of Miss Marion Wilde, 3956 Boulevard place for the following guests: Misses May Stuckmeyer, Louise Webster, Peggy Davis, Myrtle Miller, Martha Jean Houser, Beulah Hopping, Bernice Williams, Madeline Coates, Mary Ellen Shelburne, Adia Meyer, Frances Bratton, Celena Cox and Frances Cox. French Group to Meet Alliance Francaise will meet for dinner at 6:30 Tuesday night at the Washington preceding the meeting at 8. Speaker will be Emile Corboz, native of Switzerland, and a member of the club, whose subject will be “Swiss and American Gardens.'’ Arrange Card Party Sigma Rho Chi sorority will give a card party at 8:30 tonight at Clark hall, Twenty-fifth and Station streets. Members of the committee in charge are Misses Bessie Corey, Alma Joslin and Alice Corey. Clubs Meet Together Alpha and Beta chapters, Theta Sigma Delta sorority, will hold a joint meeting at 8 tonight at the SpinkfArms. Miss Dona Paucett, president, will preside.
Mrs. Floretta McCutcheon
by Mrs. Floretta D. McCutcheon, rated as the greatest of women bowlers. She will instruct novices in the fundamental of the pastime and give helpful suggestions to those who already bowl as to how they can iihprove their game. t Lessons to Be Free She also will play exhibition matches with the best of the city’s bowlers. All instruction will be free, and business women, housewives, school teachers, unemployed girls, everyone, in fact, is welcome to participate. Bowling for women has increased greatly in popularity in recent years in Indianapolis and a number of bowling clubs now are enrolled in the city association. In addition, there are several small neighborhood clubs, aa well as organiaztions in city churches. Mrs. McCutcheon has won an enviable reputation as a teacher, and hundreds of women have profited by her instructions. Courses Given in Chicago She now is completing a course of classes in Chicago, where scores of women have been instructed. Mrs. McCutcheon, whose home is Pueblo, Colo., rightly is called the world’s greatest woman bowler, due to the marvelous records she has made the last three years, during which she rose from obscurity to fame in the bowling game. She first became interested in the game as a means of reducing her weight, but soon its fascination became so strong that she made a study of it, with a view to becoming a skilled bowler. By constant practice and study she became the leading woman bowler of her home city and state, and on Dec. 18, 1927, she startled the bowling world by defeating Jimmy Smith, champion, in a special three-game exhibition on Denver bowling alleys, 704 to 686. Watch for Details Her record prior to this and subsequently shows that this great feat was no fluke, and her conquered opponent was the first to support this fact. This record stands as the highest series ever bowled from scratch by a woman in a special match game. Full details of the classes will appear in Tuesday’s Times, with enrollment blank. Watch for them, and then enroll and line up your friends for instruction in this health-giving indoor sport. It’s especially good for women golfers, and they’ll like the ten-pin sport as well as they do the links pastime. meridian Fills to GIVE MANY PARTIES A group of special parties to be held monthly has been arranged by Meridian Hills Country Club entertainment committee. These will be in addition to the luncheon and dinner bridge parties. The first, Saturday night, was a picture party and guessing contest, with pictures and objects representing club members as the puzzle to be solved. Prizes were awarded winners at the buffet supper, a feature of which was a white birthday cake lighted by red tapers in honor of the birth anniversary of A. D. Hitz, president of the club. A Monte Carlo party will be held ip February, a dinner dance inMarch and a contract bridge eve- i ning in April. The May party has not been announced. Postpone Musicale Monthly musicale of Zeta chapter, Sigma Alpha lota sorority, to have been held at the home of Mrs. Louis Traugott Wednesday night, has been postponed until February. Chi Omegas to Meet Alumnae members of Chi Omega sorority will meet Tuesday with Mrs. W. D. Roberts, 4036 Eastern avenue.
Daily Recipe GROUND BEEF BROILED ON TOAST 1 pound g round raw beef 8 slices bread Butter Salt and pepper to taste Toast the bread on one side. Butter the untoasted side, spread to the edge with a layer of ground beef, dot with the butter and broil under a flame for about 5 minutes. Season with salt and pepper and serve at once with a garnish 6f parsley or pickles.
.' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Insurance Is Thrift Week Study Topic Clubs in the Indiana Federation of*Women’s Clubs have been asked to observe Thrift week this week with papers or programs concerning insurance. Mrs. Noah Zehr, Ft. Wayne, chairman of the state insurance committee, has issued the request. “We have for our aim the education of club members on the possibilities of insurance as a protection for the home,” Mrs. Zehr said. “As in all federation work, no commercialism will be permitted. N$ company or agency propaganda shall be used. This is strictly an educational program,” she added. The insurance committee functions under the American home department, Mrs. Paul C. Miller, Mt. Summitt, chairman, through the division of family finance. Mrs. J. M. Thistlethwaite, Marion, chairman. Members of the committee are the thirteen district American home chairmen. Members of the advisory board of the federation, to meet at the Claypool Jan. 26 and 27, will be special guests at the fifth audition of the Hoosier program bureau of the Hoosier Salon Patrons Association, Jan. 26 in Ayres auditorium, Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle, Vincennes, chairman, has announced.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department Indianapolis Times, ’ Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- oc o tern No. O D o Size Street . City State Name
vm 1 ' *63
MODEL WITH CAPELET NECKLINE This has ’the* becofnihg cd'pelet neckline, with a .smart difference. And isn’t the looped sash a youthful idea? The skirt is exceedingly simple with extreme snugness over the hips, extending into a length giving panel at the front and the back. Crepe silk in black, Persian green, vivid red or sapphire blue is chic for afternoon bridge parties or tea. It echoes such a gay note ’neath the fur wrap. Sheer velvet is stunning too in black or wine-red. Style No. 863 is designed in Bizes 15, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 3% yards 38-inch with 1% yards 39-inch contrasting. Our Winter Fashion Magazine is ready. Price of book, 10 cents. Price of pattern, 15 cents in stamps or coip (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
Girl Scouts
Miss Clara Silverman invested Peferl Cohen at the meeting Monday of troop No. 27 at Communal building. Final plans were made for the mid-winter frolic to be held at Communal hall with inter-chib events. Troop No. 27 will take an active part. New candidates of troop No. 13, meeting at Kirshbaum Center, Monday, are Ruth Burton, Freida Gold, Ethel Gold and Virginia McKinney. A talk on “Girl Scouting” was given to the new scouts. Knots were practiced for tenderfoot. Next week the troop plans an inter-patrol contest to increase membership. Mildred Lingeman has transferred from troop No. 34 to troop No. 38. Alpha Thetas to Meet Alpha Theta Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the Y. W. C. A. Club to Hold Dinner Indianapolis Social Workers Club will hold a dinner meeting at 6:30 tonight at the Spink-Arms.
—WHAT’S IN FASHION— Bright and Cheery Breakfast Room Directed by AMOS PARRISH ■
NEW YORK, Jan. 18.—Today, in these breakneck times, it’s good to know that you can start the day in a breakfast room that’s comfortable as well as cheerful. Getting the popular vote is the early American type suite like the one we’ve illustrated. In maple, and with butterfly drop leaf table. Comfortable. Bright. An inviting background for food. Breakfast is something to linger over, in that atmosphere, isn’t it? And late-at-night supper parties that are so popular this winter seem gayer for such a smart group of furniture. Other new breakfast room furniture brightening American homes today is in French Provincial. Delicate lines and slim tapering legs mark this graceful type. And the early English period, in oak, shows up, too, in a cross sec-
f MAN NtItf‘“MORALS! fry By Jan£ Jordan ypl
IF you’re lonely and have no one to talk to, write to Jane Jordan today. She will answer your letters in this column. She will help you with your difficulties by sane, common sense advice. Dear Jane Jordan—What is vour opinion oi a good appearing young man in his early 20’s who wants to marrv a woman with money? The young man is myself, but I haven’t been fortunate enough to find a girl with any money. All the girls I know always are asking me for something, but they are never willing to go fiftv-fiftv on a theater or dinner bill. I should think it is no more than right for a girl to pay once in a Some men say they never will marry a girl who has more money than they have. They say a poor man never leads a happy life with a rich woman. I don t agree, for thousands of poor guls marry wealthy men and most of them seem to get along. I don’t see what difference the money would make as long as vou love each other. I would like to hear teh . opinions of the >rls on Q thi| R SubJect. Dear Wondering The trouble with you is that you are trying to get something for nothing and it can’t be done. The man who marries a rich wife usually pays heavily for what he gets, in countless ways, for, as a rule, such a wife expects complete submission from a husband who is poorer than she is. The hand that holds the purse strings rules the home. In this day of changing values, when women are achieving more independence than they ever had, they still enjoy a benevolent dominance from this husbands, but they will not take it from a man whom they feel is in any way inferior. If you had anything to offer in return for the riches, that would be different. If you had something to contribute to art, science, or letters which would make it worth while for your wife to support you, that would be different. But from the sound of your letters, all you want is to be a kept man. So far as sharing the dinner check is concerned, it is done a lot between business men and women, or between young people in love, each one working to get a start. The “Dutch treat” between boys and girls of limited means is no new thing. But convention will not permit you to ask a girl whom you know slightly to go out for the evening and ask her to pay half the expenses. It strikes me that you have a feminine streak of dependence in you which you’d better overcome if you want the respect of your fellows. Girls, what do you think? u n Dear Jane Jordan—Four years ago I married a wonderful bov who catered to mv every wish. I wanted more than he could afford, for you know an auto mechanic now doesn’t earn a large saiarv. We have been senarated three times, ali because of money. The last time he left he told me to think hard before I sent him away, for there would be no mere coming back. Now he is suing me for divorce. What shall I do? I love him so. Don’t vou think I should swallow my pride and make one last effort for a reconciliation? I can’t live without him X can’t sle?P t or eat. E., please find a tiny spot in vour hearr and forgive me! JUST lOU. Dear Just Lou —You certainly should swallow your pride and ask your husband for forgiveness. Why don’t you get a job and prove that you want to help him with expenses? Nothing will teach you the value of a dollar so much as earning your own living for a while. If he gives you another chance, you will have to work hard to prove yourself. Dear Jane Jordan —I am a e’lrl who never had anything. My aunt treats m: worse than a dog. A man has asked me to marry him. He isn’t rich, but he would give everything he could afford and the love I’ve never had. X love him i very much and always will. My aunt 1 will not like it and I will have to run , away. Please tell me what to do. A RUNAWAY. u n Dear Runaway—Run away if you must. No person should sacrifice any of the major interests of his life for the sake of another. Be sure you are right and then go ahead. Dear Jane Jordan—What would you do if the man vou loved and who loved cu asked vou to cc on a trip which would mean staving overnight at a hotel. Os I course we would have separate * corns He is verv nice and never has done u r said anything that he shouldn't, but • guess there’s a first time for everything. JUST ANOTHER GIRL. Dear Just Another Girl—lt would be safer to take a chaperone. * a * Dear A. Fish—l would drop the! girl who deceived me and concen-; trote on winning the one I had trusted. You're not a fish at aU,’ but smart to see the difference be-' l V
tion picture of the 1932 American breakfast hour. The early English suite is really a small scale copy of the English oak dining-room suites you’re admiring in so many smart homes. It’s easy to recognize by its rectangular, 1 javier lines. A trifle more formal than the breakfast room furniture we’re used to. And better, therefore, in a dinette. So wide is the spread of fashion in breakfast room furnishings that you don’t have to go in for period designs to have a smartly new room or breakfast comer. There are lots of good-looking groups not definitely period. Drop-leaf tables, and spindle back chairs, and sometimes a draw-leaf table, with those useful extra leaves that pull out. Those are the things you’ll find in modern breakfast room sets.
tween the two. How do most boys look at girls that drink? That depends on whether the boy has been reared with a prejudice against liquor. Those accustomed to serving of drinks are not horrified by a lady who takes a cocktail, whereas those ! who have had a stricter upbringing are shocked considerably.
Alumnae Group of Delta Zeta Honor Officer Indianapolis alumnae chapter of Delta Zeta sorority entertained at tea Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Noble Hiatt, 3331 North Meridian street, in honor of Mrs. Robert F. Miller, president, who will leave soon fur residence in Detroit. In the receiving line with Mrs. Hiatt and Mrs. Miller were Miss Hazel Funk, who will succeed Mrs. Miller, and other chapter officers. The tea table was centered with Killarney roses, the Delta Zeta flower, baskets of which were arranged about the -home. Miss Frances Westcott and Mrs. Robert Armstrong poured. Assisting in the dining roo mwere Mrs. Thomas Grinslade, Mrs. Harry Kerr and Miss Harriet Kistner. Mrs. Ogden Is Hostess for Harmonie Club Harmonie Club held a meeting and program this afternoon at the home of Mrs. James Ogden, 145 West Forty-third street. Tea was served after the program, with Mrs. C. A. Brockway, Mrs. William Morison, Mrs. Ernest Berr and Mrs. T. M. Rybolt assisting the hostess. Mrs. Frank Cregor reveiwed Grenado’s opera, “Goyescas.” A musical program was presented under the direction of Mrs. Ross Caldwell and Mrs. Robert Blake. Those taking part were: Mesdames Hilda Burrichter, Clyde Titus, Howard Stitt, Stewart Greene, Walter Wallace, William A. Devin, Carl Moore, Otto Heppner, C. W. Cox, and Miss Consuelo Couchman. Accompanists were: Mesdames S. K. Ruick, Frank Edenharter, Clifford Folz and Greene. GIVES PARTY FOR DAUGHTER, FRIEND Mrs. Cecil Wilcox, 2029 Wilcox street, entertained Saturday night with a dinner in honor of birthdays of her daughter, Miss Beatrice Wilcox, and Miss Helen Gill. The dinner table was centered with a bowl of sweet peas and lilies of the valley, lighted with pink and white tapers. Places of the guests were marked with corsages of sweet peas, which were presented as favors. Covers were laid for Misses Wilcox and Gill, Margaret Maylan, Kathryn Gill, Betty Foster of Terre Haute, Virginia Butterfield of Anderson; Messrs. Edward Lowe, Frederick Keers, Mathias Gill, Howard White, Jack Frost of' Richmond and Joseph High, Terre Haute. Sorority Initiates Ten Beta chapter, Delta Tau Omega, announces the initiation of the following: Mrs. Roy Cole, Misses Martha Thiesing, Louise Herrman, Mary Lou Winkler, Dorothy Marie Clinton, Mary Nearpass, Donna McCormick, Eliazbeth Laird, Dorothy Etchason, and Zelma Kunkel. Painless Same formula .. same price. In \ original form, too, if you prefer \lb/COLDS VJCKS ovaW muion ms usto ytAMy
If you live in an apartment, and have only a kitchenette, you probably need your table for working as well as serving. A porcelain top table is standard equipment there. But some of the newest suites have a wood finish which is stainproof. And that gives you most of the advantages of porcelain with an added beauty. We’re discovering that wood finishes are replacing much of the decorated designs once so inseparable with breakfast room furniture. Sometimes the oak finishes are stained gray or gold. But the grain of the wood is left to show. Don’t you agree that the simple breakfast grouping pictured above is a cheery “good-morning” welcome to all the family? And much of its charm comes from those green chintz draperies edged with yellow fluting. And the bright-looking latticed wall paper in green and white. It’s a good idea to think of the whole ensemble if you think of doing things to your breakfast nook or dinette. {Copyright. 1932, by Amos Parrish)
NEW CURTAIN IDEAS Curtains alone can make a big difference in the cheeriness of your breakfast nook or dinette. And there are smart new color schemes and curtain ideas, with sketches, which you should have, to be quite up-to-date. Write Amos Parrish, care The Times’ New York Fashion Bureau, 500 Fifth Ave., New York, for this free bulletin. A stamped addressed return envelope must be enclosed.
Next: Amos Parrish will suggest some color schemes for men’s suits and accessories. BRIDGE FETE GIVEN BY SCOUT TROOP Troop committtee of Girl Scout troop No. 17 of Woodruff Place sponsored a benefit bridge party this afternoon in Banner-Whitehill auditorium. Proceeds will be used for the purchase of a troop flag and property chest. Reservations were in charge of Mesdames Murray H. Morris, chairman; Cornelius Posson, Carl E. Pluess and Ross Ziegner. Hostesses, with them, were: Mesdames William F. Werner, Marie Schlee, Jack Thurston, Eugene F. Sullivan and Irving Fisher Hale. MISS TERRELL IS CITY MANS BRIDE Marriage of Miss Marie Ann Terrell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Terrell, Franklin, to Roland Woodard, Indianapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Woodard, Hymera, Ind., took place Saturday night at the parsonage of the Grace Methodist Episcopal church in Franklin, with the Rev. John Aldrich officiating. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Frances Terrell, Indianapolis. Roger Delphin Zinc, Indianapolis, was best man. Mr. and Mrs. Woodard are at home at 544 Middle drive, Woodruff Place. Mrs. Wallick Hostess Mrs. Martin Henry Wallick, 1507 North New Jersey street,, will be hostess for a luncheon of the woman’s auxiliary to the Tabernacle Presbyterian church at 1 Tuesday. Mrs. Alfred Hinkle will review a book, and Mrs. Charles A. j Breece will be in charge of a musicale program. Mrs. Albert J. Wohl- j gemuth is luncheon chairman.
No question mark hovers over every refinement of detail genuineKotex.No incessant doubt Kotex offers you such comfort—as to how it was made, where, security, that it will pay you under what conditions. *° make auite sure, when buying Today, fora minimum price, you wrapped, that you do get Kotex. get the unequaled protection that Kotex—and Kotex, alone, Never pay mor> than 33c offers. Made in air-washed rooms; _ of tested materials; inspected 7 6 L/ ™T" \X times before it is cut, folded and | \ | Sanitary Napkifc.
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Club Women to Test New Relief Plan Anew unemployment relief plan proposing creation of 60,000 additional work hours weekly for unemployed women, has been put forward by the National Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. Local clubs have been asked by Mrs. Geline MacDonald Bowman, president, to accept as their quotas a total number of work hours equivalent to employed membership. Work will consist of various types of personal service, whicn women ordinarily perform for themselves such as mending, sewing, laundry*, cleaning, personal shopping, simple cooking, stenographic and secretarial service. Tried for Month The plan will be carried out experimentally in 1,325 communities between Jan. 20 and Feb. 20, according to Mrs. Bowman. If it succeeds, it will be recommended to other national women’s organizations as a practical contribution women can make tow*ard economic readjustment. Suggestion has been made that the local clubs appoint special committees to canvass the membership for work opportunities. Committees will turn requests over to a central employment committee in the community rather than attempt to locate prospects, unless there are unemployed club members who wish such aid. Miss Lucy Osborn, president of the Indianapolis group, has turned the plan over to the public relations committee, headed by Miss Glen Dora Anderson. Quiz to Be Conducted Questionnaires will be submitted to members at the next meeting, to determine the different sources of help and what members have done in contributing to community unemployment relief or to individual relief in their homes or businesses. According to Miss Anderson, the plan is impractical in view of the fact that so many of the members have contributed to relief personally or through different agencies in the way of funds and clothing. However, the national federation’s suggestion will be presented to bring out individual viewpoints.
Club to Hold Annual Dance and Card Party Young Women’s Democratic Club of Indiana will hold its annual card party and dance Thursday night, I Feb. 1, at the Indianapolis Althletic | Club. Committees have been announced by the president, Mrs. William W. Rich, as follows: Cards, Miss Estelle Creagh, Mesdames Gene Anderson. Joy Holmes. Margaret Koenig, Kathryn Koster, Marie Westfall: prizes, Ernest F. Frick and Mrs. Henry Steeg; tickets. Mrs. Josephine Hatfield and Miss Marie Hansen, and publicity. Miss Gertrude Murphy and Mrs. Htrley McCabe. The club will 'hold a dinnerbridge tonight at the Antlers, as the third of a series of social meetings. Rose, black and silver will be the colors predominating in the decorations and appointments. Mrs. Walter A. Shead is chairman of the entertainment committee, assisted by Mesdames Katherine Koster, Martin Walpole, Misses Helen Jackson, Mary Hussey, Jean Anderson and Rosemary Fogarty. GIRLS WILL MODEL IN DISPLAY AT CLUB Daughters of Indianapolis Athletic club members will model the new spring styles at the fashion dinner the club will hold Wednesday night. Southern resort frocks also will be shown. Among those who will take part in the style parade are Mrs. Waiter Baker Williams, Mrs. Otto Eisenlohr, Miss Eleanor Stickney, Miss Betty Brown, Miss Janet Adams and Miss Julia Freyn. # Sorority to Hear Talk Indianapolis Alumnae of Pi Lambda Theta sorority, will meet at 7:30 tonight at the home of Miss Marie Sangernebo, 324 East Twelfth street. Mrs. Persie White Simmons of the Herman H. Young Foundation, will speak on the work of a psychology clinic.
FREE-FREE HAIR BOBBING BRING this cocpon Tuesday morning :30 to 10:30 a. m. we will 808 your HAIR absolutely FREE, under the expert supervision of Mr. IrL CENTRAL BEACTV COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. Lincoln 0432
