Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 217, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 January 1932 — Page 7

JAN. 19, 1932.

Hoosier Art Salon Will Draw Clubs Bpecial club days have been arranged through Mrs. Frank F. Hummel, Chicago, chairman for the Hoosier salon, Jan. 23 to Feb. 6, at Marshall Field galleries, in Chicago. Mrs. Hummel is assisted by Mrs. Carl P, Hubbard, vice-chairman, and Mrs. James L. Saylor, college chairman. There will be a reception and preview at 8:30 next Saturday night for guarantors, contributors, prize donors, patrons and special guests of honor, when John C. Shaffer, president of *the Hoosier Salon Patrons’ Association, will speak. Out-of-town visitors, artist members and Hoosier residents of Chicago are invited to view the administration building for the 1933 Century of Progress exhibition at 2:30 Sunday. Members of the association also are invited to inspect the art treasures of the Vincent Bendix gallery Sunday night at the former home of Mr. and Mrs. Potter Palmer, on Sheridan road. Luncheon Planned Marshall Field Cos. have extended an invitation to all artist members, out-of-town patrons and special guests of honor to attend a luncheon in the Wedgewood room at 12:30 Monday. G. R. Schaeffer will be host, and speakers will be announced later. Daughters of Indiana of Chicago will hold a tour at 2:30 Tuesday with Mrs. Edward A. Canine, Terre Haute, president of the Indiana Federation of Clubs; Mrs. Hamet D. Hinkle, Vincennes, chairman of the fine arts department of the federation; Mrs. Harry Lee Beshore, Richmond, chairman of the art department of the federation, and Mrs. John T. Wheeler, president of the Indiana Federation of Art Clubs, Imong the guests of honor. Purdue Association of Chicago ►ill hold a luncheon Wednesday, followed by a gallery tour at 2:30 Saturday. The Indiana Tri-Kappa sorority will hold a tour at 11 and luncheon in Wedgewood room at 1. Mrs. Merrill Davis, art chairman, is in charge of arrangements. Miss Hallie Borz, grand president, will be guest of honor with council members. and Dr. Allen Diehl Albert will speak. Butler Alumni to Meet Hitler Alumni Club of Chicago also will have luncheon at 12:30 Saturday in the Mission Grill. Gilbert Fuller, president; Mrs. Allen K. Ingalls, Mrs. Clifford Browder and Mrs. Hope W. Graham will be hosts, and Dr. Walter S. Athearn, university president, and Mrs. Athearn. and Mr. and Mrs. Hilton U. Brown will be honor guests. Chicago Alumni of Indiana university will have a luncheon in the Wedgewood room at 12:30 the following Saturday, in charge of Walter J. Matthews, president, with Dr. William Lowe Bryan, university president; Dean Agnes Wells, James M. Sheldon and Major-General Roy D. Keehn, Illinois national guard, honor guests. De Pauw Luncheon Arranged Other college groups who will hold luncheons on the same day are Franklin College Club of Chicago, at 12:30 in the Walnut room, No. 1, with acting President Robert H. Kent and Mrs. Kent as guests; De Pauw Alumni Association of Chicago at 1 in the Walnut room, No. 2, with Mrs. Edward Rector, Dean Katherine Alvord, Bishop Edwin Hughes, Roy O. West and Dr. W. W. Sweet, guests, and Earlham College Girls’ Club at 12:30 in Mission Grill, Dean O. M. Ross and Mrs. Ross as honor guests. Former graduates of Hanover college also will assemble for luncheon arranged by Mrs. H. C. Lorenzen. Indiana State Teachers’ Association will sponsor a lunhceon at 12:30 in Walnut room No. 3 with President Linnaeus N. Hines and Dr. Willard Rmbinson as guests. De Pauw Alumni Association also will have as guests the following, who were former students at the university: Reynolds Selfridge, Indianapolis: Mrs. Sallie Hall Steketee, Grand Rapids; Homer G. Davisson, Ft. Wayne, and Clay Kelly, Chicago. Mrs . Brown to Speak Mrs. Demarchus Brown will speak at 10 Tuesday morning at the Brookside community house, before the Brookside Woman’s Club. Her subject will be “India.” Phi Chi Omega to Meet Phi Chi Omega sorority will meet Wednesday night at the home of Miss Leila Blaco, 1540 North Capitol avenue.

Daily Recipe STEAMED APRICOT PUDDING 1-2 pound dried apricots 1 1-2 cups sifted softwheat flour 1-2 cup suet 1-2 cup sugar 1 egg 2 teaspoons baking powder l-U teaspoon salt 1-2 cup milk Wash the apricots, chop fine, and mix with 2 tablespoons of the flower. Sift the remaining flour with the baking powder and salt. Cream the fat, add the sugar, and well-beaten eggs, and add alternately with the milk to the sifted dry ingredients. Stir In the apricots. Pour into a greased mold, cover, and steam for 2 hours. Serve with vanilla sauce.

mrurr should go vvll E.3 by 5~ HOUR JMR Muaterole afa "counter-ir. S ntant.” it often effective after M st application and usually draws out muscular soreness niSas

MODEL FOR FASHION SHOW

IS 11 BeJ[ I * I ■ V s ■ 1 I HR 1 I jj |p

Miss Janet Adams, debutant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Elder Adams, 4145 Washington boulevard, is one o fthe “daughters” who w’ill model southern wear and new spring styles at the fashion dinner of the Indianapolis Athletic Club Wednesday night. Miss Adams is pictured wearing a sheath gown of white Irish crochet with a diminutive shoulder cape, the low decolletage finished in back with a flame-colored flower and in front with a cowl. Miss Adams, with other daughters of members, supplemented by Ayres mannequins, will model beach, sports and street wear, afternoon and evening gowns, from 6 to 9.

OMEGA PHI TAUS TO HOLD BRIDGE PARTY Mrs. Ralph Maddux, 5317 Lawrence avenue, will entertain members of Omega Phi Tau sorority at her home Wednesday night with a bridge party and shower in honor of Mrs. John R. Craig, a member of the sorority. Before her recent marriage, Mrs. Craig was Miss Alice Brady. Decorations and appointments will be in the sorority colors, violet and gold. Mrs. Craig will be presented with a gift from the sorority. Mrs. Ervin Renamed Mrs. Alice Ervin was re-elected president of the Sesame Club at a meeting held Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lewis Finch, 44 Layman avenue. New officers chosen were: Mrs. Roy Gorton, vice-president; Mrs. Lester M. Poarch, secretary-treasurer, and Mrs. C. J, Sumners, assistant sec-retary-treasurer. Auxiliary Will Meet Mrs. E. W. Cowley, 1216 Central avenue, will be hostess to a luncheon meeting of the auxiliary to the Thirty-eighth division at 12 Wednesday. A program will follow the luncheon. Arrange Party Annual membership spread of Beta chapter, Omega Phi Tau sorority, will be held at 7:30 tonight at Brookside park community house, with Miss Fern Van Voorst in charge of arrangements, assisted by Miss Amy Herman.

Keeps in tie ailments from growing into BIG ONES! It may be just a coated tongue tonight... with dull c\cs. kid mlor and breath. But * bv those svmDtoms Nature is tolling von that you may have a sick child tomorrow. ' £ I lelp tonight is simple. Tomorrow it may jjfl be harder. A single, simple dose of Castcria -■ is usually all that's needed to bring relief; it BH| fASffiiSl m often keeps a serious illness from developing. nßf |9| Castoria. you know, is the children’s own iagjSfWlg* remedv—made sneeiallv to give the gentle "raH help their delicate organs must have. It is a *®SBS§i3gi jxM;.. Eure, -vegetable preparation; ccntains no KK arsh drugs, no narcotics. In any starting illness such as a cold, a gr little fever, a food upset, a first-aid dose of gjT } Castoria is always a wise precaution. ci§C f ' It’s never hard to get children lo take. ‘-SUSS"-**' s*B Castoria. They love its taste, and are grate- Hi ful for the relief it always brings to ticd-up systems. i|a H^^B For babies or for older children, depend on Castoria’s gentle regulation. It has kept .''B® many a little ailment from growing into a ■ J serious one! Genuine Castoria always has the name Chas. H. Fletcher on the package. CASTORIA ■ ■ Why Not a Vacation Trip to HAWAII!! A delightfully new and different travel experience on the famous “Beach at Waikiki” A perfect-all-year playground There is bathing and boating on the famous “Beach at Waikiki.” There is fishing, golfing, motoring, hiking. There is the precipice of Nunau Pali, snow-capped Mauna Loa, volcanic mountains and vast lava fields. And of no less pleasure is the restful, invigorating and enjoyable voyage from fascinating San Francisco. If you would like to know more about a trip to Hawaii, communicate with RICHARD A. KURTZ, MANAGER TRAVEL BUREAU The Leading Travel Bureau in Indianapolis fIuNION TRUST*' 120 E. Market St. Riley 5341

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Oranges, cereal, cream, frizzled dried beef, graham muffins, milk, coffee Luncheon — Vegetable soup, toast sticks, salmon and lettuce open sandwiches, rice and peach pudding, milk, tea. Dinnei — Turkish pilaf, cauliflower in cream sauce, stuffed beet salad, blueberry pie, milk, coffee.

Chapter Will Meet Beta chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma sorority, will meet Wednesday night with Mrs. William H. Schwomeyer, 33 North Denny street. Mothers Will Gather Mothers’ Club of Delta Sigma Epsilon sorority will meet at 2 Wednesday at the chapter house, 2306 North New Jersey street. New Rates to Be Offered By Times Special CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 19. The city council at its session tonight will receive anew schedule of electric rates from the Public Service Company of Indiana. Another schedule was rejected by the council several weeks ago.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Prohibition Blamed for Corruption Marking the twelfth anniversary of National prohibition in the United States, the Women’s Organization for National Prohibition Reform has issued a summary of prophecies and pledges made by prohibitionists in the ratification campaign and a contrasting summary of the record of national prohibition during the last twelve years. “This is the situation in which the government of the United States finds itseli after twelve years’ experiment with national prohibition,” Mrs. Charles H. Sabin, president of the organization, asserts. The latter report shows a 300 per cent increase of speakeasies in place of saloons with an increase of more than a billion dollars in the nation’s drink bill, and attributes the present regime of corruption to the introduction of liquor traffic. Deaths from alcolholism have increased 4 per cent generally, and 400 per cent among women, and arrests from drunkenness have in-

How to Reduce Colds and Their Costs This Winter One of Family’s Biggest Problems Met With Vick “Control-of-Colds” Plan

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Rent Now ' P Income, coming in regularly, helps meet the taxes, light and heat bills. A vacant house, room, garage, or flat is a money eater—an economic, waste. People buying cars, want to rent garages at once; newlyweds want to rent suites; young men, coming into town to work, want rooms, furnished houses, etc. It costs less to advertise your vacancy in The Times than in any other local paper. Your ad this week will reach more than 250,000 Times readers. m TIMES | Want Ads Riley 5551 Yea, you can phone Rental Ada or a cash discount if placed at office*

creased 300 per cent, the report disclosed. The cost of crime in the United States amounts to more than three million dollars a day, resulting in overcrowding federal prisons, and an increase of more than 169 per i cent in total prison expenditures, j the report continues, stating that there are 990 boys and girls in ! prisons today for violating the pro- j hibition law. The federal government spends j $40,000,000 a year to enforce the law, loses $882,000,000 annually in | federal revenues, and $1,000,000 in state revenues. “Thirty-two states,” the report states further, “refuse to spend one cent to enforce the law; twentytwo states never have made any appropriation for the enforcement of national prohibition and ten additional states have ceased to appropriate any money for enforcement since 1927. Promises attributed to the drys by the women’s organizations, and , quoted from the prohibition rati- ! Bcation’s handbook, are: The saloons j will be closed; drinking will be re- j duced; drunkeness will disappear; crime will be reduced at least one- ! half; constantly increasing cost of taxpayers in providing for saloonmade convicts, insane, imbecile and delinquent will be stopped; politics will be cleaned up with the removal of the liquor menace, and team work will be shown between states in fighting the drink evil.

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