Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 238, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1932 — Page 8

PAGE 8

‘ Manchuria, * Is Topic of Dr. Oxnatn “My Personal Trip to Japan, and the Manchurian Question” will be the subject of a lecture by President Q. Bromley Oxnam of De Pauw university, at a luncheon meeting of the Indiana council on international relations Saturday at the 3pink-Arms. Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools, will introduce the speaker. Mrs. Isaac Born, vicechairman of the council, will preside. Others at the speakers’ table will be: Dr. David M. Edward*, executive secretary; Dr. and Mrs. Walter Scott Athearn, Mr and Mrs. Charles Jewett. Mr. ana Mrs Silas Reagan, Mesdames Thomas Knckley. Edward Toner of Anderson, John W. Kern. Paul E Tombaugh, Brandt C. Downey. Charles Harvey Bradley. Walter Oreenough. Samuel Komlners. Linton Cox, w S. Lockhart. Miss May Shipp. Miss Hilda Stewart, Dr. Jean 8 Milner. Bishop Edgar Blake, Dwight C. Morgan, George Buck, Daniel T. Weir, Dean J. W. Putnam, Russell Wilson, Thomas C. Howe and Dr. I. J. Todd. University girls who will act as ushers are: Misses Marjorie De Vaney, Betty Williams. Jane Boltz, Margaret Harrison, Betty Amos, Ruth Bradford, Martha Crawford, Prances Sharpe and Marjorie Ann Lilly. The luncheon is open to the public. Reservations may be made at the Spink-Arms, or at the office of the council in the Illinois building. Flower Mission Annual Session to Be March 3 Ii dianapolis Flower Mission will hold its quarterly meeting March 3, preceded by a luncheon. Members of the advisory board will attend. Plans for the luncheon were made at a called meeting of the board of directors Thursday in the Architects and Builders building. Mrs. James H. Lowes and Mrs. Lloyd Bowers were appointed to make arrangements. Mrs. David Ross, president, presided, and Mrs. Lowes, treasurer, told of the work being done to provide proper diet for the mission's tubercular patients. Mrs. Fred Noerr, district visitor, spoke on existing conditions among needy families, and stated that the number of tuberculosis cases is increasing, with children being constantly exposed. She said that patients are suffering from lack of hospital facilities. The Flower Mission expects to provide a hospital for such patients as soon as possible.

Visiting Co-Eds Guests at Tea Before Session Delegates to the Urban Panhellenic Association national convention at Butler today and Saturday were entertained at a tea this afternoon at the home of Miss Martha Crawford, 2710 North Pennsylvania street. In the receiving line with Miss Crawford were Miss Helen Weyl, association national president; Mrs. Walter Scott Athearn, Mrs. Harry G. Leslie, Mrs. Edna M. Christian, Miss Ruby Hamilton, Miss Fred Bach and Miss Harriett McGaughey. Miss Katherine Thurston, president of the Butler Panhellenic Association, and Miss Edith Allen poured. Assisting in the dining room were: Mesdames C. C. Crumbaker, Leo M. Gardner. Calvin Hamilton. Donald O’Neil. Frank Churchman and Miss Marie SanKernebo. Assisting with hospitalities were Mesdames Frances Sipex, John Bruenic, Albert Fessler. R S. Gill, J. C. Carter Neal Grider. James H. Ruddell and Miss Harriett Kistner. Decorations were in rainbow shades and spring flowers. Music was furnished during the afternoon by Miss Rea Bower and Miss Norma Davidson. Delegates here for the conference include: Misses Helen Louise Titus. Kappa Kappa Gamma, De Pauw university; Henrietta Steinburg. Chi Alpha Tau and Rita Worschauer. Lambda Gamma Phi, Hunter college; Mary Garber. Delta Zeta, and Lois Eokrs, Alpha Xi Delta, Pittsburgh university; Pauline Kennedy. Zeta Tau Alpha, and Janice Cahill, Phi Mu. Akron university; Catherine Flynn, University of Denver: Marjorie Spooner. Kappa Kappa Gamma, University of Minnesota, and Virginia Martin and Eleanor Givens. Kappa Alpha Theta, Northwestern university. Lucretia Green. Gamma Phi Beta and Marie Vaughn, Pi Beta Phi, Washington university. St. Louis; Ruth Warren. Chi Omega, and Katherine Watkins. Alpha Delta PI, Oeorge Washington university; Irma Wagner, Alpha Gamma Delta, and Bernadette Shyne. Zeta Tau, University of Buffalo; Irene Simmons. Kappa Delta, and Virginia Wartman, Zeta Tau Alpha. Syracuse university; Virginia Dendrock, Pi Beta Phi. Lillian Holtz, Theta Phi Alpha. Ruth Hud. Delta Delta Delta and Marion Solomon. Sigma Delta Tau. Ohio State university. and Dorothy Miller, Psi Chi Phi. To'edo university. Miss Amy B. Onken, national president, of Pi Beta Phi, and a member of national panhellenic congress, also is a convention guest. Principal to Entertain Mrs. Anna Torrence, principal of school No. 86 will entertain her associate teachers with a Valentine luncheon bridge Saturday in the crystal room at the Marott. Sorority Guest Mrs. Mary Traub Busch will be the guest soloist at a meeting of the Alpha chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority at 1 Saturday at the home of Mrs. W. F. Shirley, 2032 Broadway.

Daily Recipe . SPANISH SAUCE 2 tablespoons chopped onion 4 tablespoons bacon fat 3 tablespoons flour 2 cups canned tomatoes 1 No. 2 can peas Chopped parsley Salt and pepper to taste Cook the onion in the fat for a few minutes. Sprinkle the flour over the onions and blend; then quickly stir in the tomatoes and canned peas, and simmer for about 10 or 15 minutes. Add chopped parsley, salt and pepper and serve at once over the omelette or scrambled eggs.

COTTON IS DEPRESSION SEASON’S STYLISH FABRIC

Bibs, Tuckers, Pinafores Achieve New Sophistication From Paris Creators

lniiil6ii>w<i....i.'. w i MPMBBBBBaBMIMBfIfIBSfIoMHaJaJ

Personals

Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Kennington, 3907 Washington boulevard, are at the Suwannee hotel in St. Petersburg, Fla., for the remainder of the winter. Miss Grace Hutchings has returned from Evansville, where she gave a lecture-recital Tuesday night before the Woman Musicians Club on “The Development of American Music.” Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Davis are registered at the Roosevelt in New York. Miss Luella Craig, Alameda apartments, has returned from ten days spent in New Orleans, where she witnessed the Mardi Gras.

Card Parties

Psychical Research Society will hold a euchre card party in the Lincoln room at the Lincoln Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hamilton will be in charge. euchre and bunco party at 8:30 tonight at the hall, 29y s South Delaware street. CHIU SUPPER GIVEN BY GIRL SCOUTS Northside Girl Scout high school troop held a chili supper Thursday at Girl Scout headquarters in the Board of Trade building. A program of stunts, arranged by Miss Jean St. Pierre, was given. Miss Clara Foxworthy was in charge of the meeting. The troop has adopted the name, “The-so-Mer,” and recently elected Mrs. E. Blake Francis, former Scout commissioner, as honorary captain.

aipßl! Up; . vtp mmF W

MOTHER OF 7-STILL YOUNG

The woman who gives her organs the right stimulant need not worry about growing old. Her system doesn’t stagnate; her face doesn’t age. She has the health and “pep” that come from a lively liver and strong, active bowels. When you’re sluggish and the system needs help, don’t take a lot of “patent medicines.” There’s a famous doctor’s prescription for just such cases, and every druggist keeps this standard preparation. It is made from fresh laxative herbs, active senna, and pure pepsin. Just ask for Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. Take a little every day or so, until every organ in your body feels the big improvement. The next time you have a bilious headache, or feel all bound-up, take

Altrusa Club Hears Talk on Old Races Mrs. Glenn Diddel was speaker at the luncheon meeting of Altrusa Club today at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Diddel was born and reared in Yucatan where her father, Edward H. Thompson was United States consul. Thompson made many important archeological discoveries and succeeded in bringing before the world the fact that Mayan culture buried in the jungles, was as old as the Egyptian. Mrs. Diddel’s talk concerned Yucatan. Mrs. Elizabeth Redmond Boyle, president, presided. Educational committee of the club has arranged a special night meeting to be held April 16 when Miss Virginia Foulk, Huntington, W. Va., national education chairman, will speak on, “The Glory of the Fioneer.” Other clubs in the state will be invited to attend. PI OMICRON WILL INDUCT NEW GROUP Plans for organizing anew chapter of Pi Omicron sorority in Indianapolis are under way. Mrs. Warren W. Shearer, at the sorority’s State headquarters, 311 Circle Tower building, is receiving applications. The new chapter is to be composed of homemakers, and will meet twice monthly. The other chapters are for business women. Mrs. John Hayes Bailey will be the program leader. There will be study programs, work in conversational English and book review.

this delicious syrup instead of the usual cathartic. You’ll be rid of all that poisonous waste, and you haven’t weakened the bowels. You’ll have a better appetite, and feel better in every way. The constant use of cathartics is often the cause of a sallow complexion and lines in the face. And so unnecessary! Would you like to break yourself of the cathartic habit? At the same time building health and vigor that protects you from frequent sick spells, headaches, and colds? Get a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin today. Use it often enough to avoid those attacks of constipation. When you feel weak and run-down, or a coated tongue or bad breath warns you the bowels need stimulating. Give it to the children instead of stronger laxatives that sap their strength. It isn’t expensive.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

b %Pjaß gift |MP

An afternoon frock (left) by Worth has anew scarf of black and white, with complementary gloves and bag. A supple black picot straw (center) of the beret persuasion, trimmed with dull-sur-faced white satin ribbon, is offered by Molyneux for early spring. A Lanvin late afternoon costume (right) shows a soft silver lame with an iceblue tinge to it, worn with a dull black crepe skirt.

BY ROSETTE HARGROVE NEA Service Writer ■pARIS, Feb. 12. The 1932 ■*- spring season shows every sign of being an all-cotton one. The guileless cotton bibs and tuckers and pinafore tops of yore seem to have acquired all at once an air of sophistication after they have passed through the hands of Paris creators. Even the gingham frocks have an air that is very remote from those we all wore so many years ago. This is due to a vastly improved science of cut and the desire to maintain the slender silhouette unknown in those days. Open mesh weaves are the order of the day for the new cottons as well as for the woolens; and the rougher appearing the surface, the better. Coarse and

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grape fruit sections, cereal, cream, corn meal pancakes with fresh maple syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Vegetable oyster soup, croutons, cottage cheese and jelly sandwiches, cocoanut cookies, lemonade. Dinner —; Braised shoulder of lamb, browned potatoes, creamed carrots, curly endive with bacon dressing, shredded fresh pineapple, maple syrup cake, milk, coffee.

I — " —'' I '

sheer handkerchiefs of linens, muslins, quilted and patterned piques, and gaily-colored chintzes figure largely for day clothes, beach pajamas and for semi-for-mal evening. # # ALL these novelties were features of Vera Bourea’s collection which started the spring showings. Following the general trend, the youthful creator places her waistline higher than normal, with skirts for sports wear twelve inches from the floor and almost ankle-length for street and semiformal w T ear. The general line is form-fitting and with just a suspicion of a flare in the skirts to insure freedom of movement. The fashionable wide shoulder-effect is achieved by puffs, torsades and epaulettes, the latter for day clothes. Jackets accompanying skirts or dresses are all short, barely reaching the hipbone and many of them fitted. Scarfs replace collars on many of these and when weather conditions enable the wearer to discard the jacket, this scarf is twisted loosely around the waistline of the simple frock underneath. Twisted strands of wool in two contrasting colors form a torsade

BUT they changed their minds when they used the New Oxydni WHAT a pitiful story kitchen ing suds. Clean smelling suds shelves tell of women’s that float dirt out of clothes efforts to lighten the burden of and keep it out so clothes are housework—shelves crowded snowy white—suds that cut with soaps and powders sup- grease on dishes so they rinse „ _ j * i .i. i 8 ... i j .u i MADE m TrtE makers or posed to make their work sparkling clean —suds that . * ® , IVORY SOAP easier. lighten all your housework. But there is one soap to do Try this new soap. Use enough that now—the amazing New to make rich suds—it never Oxydol does everything for balls up or leaves a scum—just you! thick foamy suds in hard water F .toLI %i| p| It’s easy on hands, easy on or soft water turned hard by I ™ clothes and wonderful for dirty clothes or dishes. Ask . dfehes. It does more work be- your grocer today for a packcause it makes 50% more suds age of Oxydol. —richer, quicker, more last- Procter & Gamble Jtt O\VDI.W^V % REQ. u. S. PAT. OFF.

TII Iv 4 OMI*L I] T E II OISI] II O fill SO Al 1 • ■

that finishes off a _ neckline or forms an original belt. Sleeves are slit in all manner of unexpected ways—at the shoulder seam, at the elbow and just above the wrist. Every shade of blue, grege, a dusty orange and much black and white are the colors stressed in this collection for day, while black and white are also conspicuous in the evening clothes. tt tt B LYOLEN is another creator / whose collection is sure of success this season. Besides her original use of cotton materials there are a number of details such as very wide sashes, intricately cut puff sleeves, cotton linings matching dress or blouse to accompanying coats or jackets, unusual button effects, stressing the popular wide shoulder silhouette, and short, stiff cravats of gingham completing suits are among the many new ideas to be gleaned from this very interesting collection. Pinafore dresses with check, printed or plain gingham tops are a solution to the depleted dress allowance, as you can always manage two or three-color combinations to one dress. Checked blue and white, orange

and white and red and white tuck-in blouses are worn with very high-waisted skirts and completed by amusing, tight-fit-ting jackets that barely reach the hips. Every dress and jacket features some button trimming, round, ballshaped or flat disc steel buttons being the most favored. Necklines hug the throat in all day clothes. Evening clothes are interesting. The line is directly empire in two or three instances, flaring gently from the knee to ankle-length hem. Sleeves are a feature in this category, too, but for the less formal type of gown. They are elbow length, very full and caught into a narrow band. Several fin-de-journee dresses have black or light colored extremely highwaisted skirts and blouses that are nothing more than guimpes of sheer chiffon in a different color. Ankle-length beach pajamas, full-length pajamas in interesting color combination and attractive beach wraps of heavy, coarse-weave crash cloth are outstanding elements of interest.

v • jP and the soreness is gone; the danger of infection reducer!. Hj| sniffle. For headaches, neuralgia, neuritis; or rheumatism.

FEB. 12, 1932

Bicentennial Is Observed at Club Tea Among clubs observing the George Washington bicentennial this month is the Friday Afternoon Reading Club, whose celebration was a colonial tea this afternoon at the home of Mrs. George H. Healey, 2415 North Alabama street. Mrs. Healey and Mrs. B. C. Wright greeted the guests, who wore colonial costumes. During the afternoon a program was given by Mrs. Wright. Mrs. M. C. Moore and Mrs. E. J. Unruh. who sang colonial songs, accompanied by Mrs. H. R. Aughmbaugh, pianist, and Zerelda and Ada Rubush, who danced the minuet. A feature of the decorations was George Washington's picture, draped with American flags. The tea table was arranged with a lace cover and a silver tea service at each end. Centered with a bowl of red rsses, it was lighted by red tapers. Mrs. Cecil Strupe, president, and Mrs. A. J. Barnes presided. Miniature flags and candy cherries were given as favors. Alpha Zctas to Meet Alpha Upsilon chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta sorority will meet Tuesday night.at the Washington.