Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 June 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Open School for Leaders in Scouting A welcome campfire program was held at Dellwood Sunday night for the. Girl Scout leaders who have arrived for the Great Lakes regional training school, which opened this morning. Miss Jean Adamson, local director of Indianapolis Girl Scout*, told the story of Dellwood to the visitors. Miss Alice Kirk, regional director and head of the school, extended the welcome greetings to the leaders. Miss Kirk introduced these national staff instructors : MU* Meldon Everett or Chicago. In charge of the general course, which ia the basic course in Otrl Bcout ttainlng; MUs Ida Mav Born of New York, in charge of the tramnlng and trailing, a course in outdoor activities for camD counselors. Miss Alice Mulkev of Texas, who will train leader* in trooo progress. which look* toward a wider range of activities for older girls: and Miss Katie Yee Johnson, regional carno advisor, who will conduct a camping course. This national staff will be assisted by seven counselors, as follows: Swimming: Marva Hough, from the Unlversitv of Illinois. and Priscilla Lockwood Campbell of Richmond. Ind.; dramatics. Bernice Hess. from Milwaukee. Milwaukee Downer college: handicraft. Alice Drought. Milwaukee college, and Dorothv Desormeaux. from the University of Wisconsin; nature. Josephine Mannv. from Stephen college. Columbia, Missouri; special activities. Virginia McLean. from Northwestern university. The recreational features of the school offer swimming, folk and tap dancing, tennis, archery, singing and Informal camp fires. The school will run for two weeks, and has an enrollment of 125 leaders, with twenty-five national and local staff members. Among the special activities scheduled are an interstate swim meet, j and a showing by Mrs. Edward A. Gardner of motion pictures of Indianapolis Girl Scouts, during Mrs. j Hoover’s visits, and of the Washington bicentennial pageant. Mary H. Piatt Is Married to Virgil Norford Miss Mary Helen Piatt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Piatt of Ft. Wayne, was married Sunday afternoon at her home to Virgil Harold Norford, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Norford, 5864 Broadway. The Rev. J. F. Edwards of the Huntington Methodist church officiated. Miss Martha Louise Piatt, sister of the bridge, was the only attendant at the ceremony, which was witnessed by the immediate family and a few friends. The couple will be at home at 5955 Central avenue. Mrs. Norford attended the Ft. Wayne Art school. Gulf Park college at Gulport, Miss., and the Chicago Art Institute. Mr. Norford is a graduate of Purdue university, where he was a Wilbur scholar and was elected to Sigma Xi Tau. Beta Pi and Chi Epsilon honorary fraternities.
Card Parties
Mineola Club will hold a luncheon and card at 2 Thursday at the home of Mrs. A. J. Ammon, 518 East Twenty-eighth street. Social committee of Capital Rebekah lodge No. 839, will hold a card party tonight in its social rooms, Hamilton avenue ind East Washington street. Big sisters’ maternity branch, Catholic Women’s Union, will give a card, bunco and lotto party at 8:30 Tuesday night at St. Cecelia hall. Hoosier Auxiliary 624, Veterans of Foreign Wars, will give a card party at 2 Tuesday at 1038 Willow drive. Camellia lodge 121, Ladies Society Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, will have a card party at 2:30 Tuesday at Castle Hall, 230 Ea£t Ohio street, fifth floor. Mrs. William Jones will be in charge. HOOSIER PAIR TO WED AT CHICAGO Mrs. Wilda Shalley of Ft. Wayne and Charles L. Hartman of Indianapolis will be married Tuesday in Chicago at the Logan Square Evangelical church, with Dr. G. B. Kimmel, president of the Theological seminary, Napperville, 111., reading the ceremony. They will sail Friday aboard the Italian ship, Roma, for Europe. They will land at Naples, June 27, and will travel extensively until Sept. 16, when they will leave Southampton for the United States. After Oct. 1 they will be at home at 5040 Pleasant Run parkway. MISS VAN CLEAVE D. H. MARKS, WED Miss Hope Van Cleave, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Van Cleave. 814 South Taft street, became the bride of David H. Marks at her parents’ home Saturday night. The Rev. J. W. Colins read thn ceremony. The bride wore a gown of blue crepe and wore blonde accessories. She wore a corsage of yellow roses and gardenias. Only attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Van Cleave. A reception was held at the attendants’ home, 6200 East Sixteenth street. DEMOCRATIC CLUB PLANS CARD PARTY The Women’s Third Ward Democratic Club will have a card party this evening at the home of the president, Mrs. John Donnelly, 1824 North Pennsylvania street. The social committee, composed of Mrs. Thomas Carroll, chairman; Mrs. John Cain and Mrc. Mary Knippenberg, will be assisted by Mesdames Joseph Hoffman, Badger Williamson, Mayme Napolitano, George Connolly, L. L. McWhirter and Miss Agnes Coleman. MISS MOORE GIVES TROUSSEAU PARTY. Miss Florence Moore, who will be married June 18 to Floyd James Meeker to the McKee chapel of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, entertained Saturday afternoon with a trousseau tea. Assisting her were here mother. Mrs. A. H. Moore, and her sister, Mrs. Gerald Redding. Mrs Howard Kiser and Miss Mary Caswell poured
Wardrobe for Business Girl Should Be Selected With Care and Taste
By NEA Service THE business of keeping cool and collected in office life depends to a great extent on the clothes you wear, according to heads of the Katharine Gibbs school, which is devoted to turning out secretaries — perfect in appearance and letter perfect in performance. A smart appearance pays in a decidedly higher wage for experienced as well as inexperienced business women and is a well recognized factor in getting a job. To make dressing on a salary thoroughly practical, this school
(MAN NtW* ND MOI\ALS| By Jane J oKdAn yV)
THE problems of men are Interesting to Jane Jordan, who invites their letters. Write today and your answer will appear in this column in a f6w days. Dear Jane Jordan—What do vou think of a wife who tells her husband he has enough love for three women? She says I am too old to want to be always loving her. She does not like affection. She is 45 vears old and I am younger than she is. We have been married twenty-six vears. I was sixteen when we married. We never have been separated and get. along fine, except that she will not let me love her. We have two children. Dav or night she turns from me when X trv to love her. I do not know what I would do if X had a wife who loved me as much as I loved her. Could you or anvone else blame me if I would step out? LOVING HUSBAND. Dear Loving Husband—People who now are in their 30s or 40s were brought up with the idea that no man is worthy of a good woman. They were taught to believe that every time a -woman permits her husband’s approach, she is making him a gift for which he should be humbly gratefull. The desires of the body were beyond the pale of decent women, who sacrificed themselves grudgingly to their husband’s lower nature. Love relationships after the wife had passed the childbearing age were regarded as a sore trial for the woman. This attitude which defies frigidity in women has resulted in a flock of unhappy marriages. If the husband of a so-called “good woman” wants any real co-operation in love, he must look for it outside of marriage When driven out by the coldness of his wife, she is the first to condemn him for his infidelity, Refuses to without taking a scrap of 'the Take Share blame on herself, where it really of Blame belongs. Modern psychology has deprived the frigid wife of all claim to virtue. She now- has been denounced as an abnormal type, in need of treatment from a psychiatrist. Instead of interpreting her coldness as a guarantee of good character, psychologists soundly have condemned her for her lack of cooperation and blamed many evils of marriage upon it. always creates an unhappy situation where one partner has more love to give than the other is capable of receiving. This unfortunate state of affairs condemns one of the partners to a life of loneliness, full of struggle against unfilled longings. Today the wife who shuts her husband out in the cold is not considered virutous, but selfish. She expects him to keep his part of the contract by removing the necessity for outside exMind Now periments. This is „„ j , a dishonest rtClosed to Uude • New Ideas R e-education on the part of your wife is your only hope, and at her age it will be difficult, because her mind probably is shut to new ideas. Forty-five years of false education is difficult to undo. I suppose that by a sort of unwritten law you would be justified in “stepping out.” But I doubt if it would solve your problem. A man’s whole being, mental as well as as physical, should enter into a relationship to give it the meaning which the human heart craves. Lax behavior is threatened by many dangers which hardly repay you for relief which leaves the heart as hungry as ever. These dangers include the loss of your peaceful life with your wife, the condemnation of your friends, the dislike of your children and the risk of illness. Think twice. Dear Jan# Jordan—l am Just a poor fellow with a black past, trying to live It down, and I need someone to help me do so. I have paid the state for the thing I was guilty of and now life is just a misery, the same every dav. For the last five years it has been this way. Every time I ask a girl for a date. I am turned down because of my past life. I don’t want to go on living tnis way, • yet at the same time I do not want to die a coward. In other words. I don't care to live, as X have no faith in myself nor in other people, and I don’t want to die yet. because I am only 25 years old and feel that I have a fighting chance to make good. Do you think that If I ever should be lucky in getting a girl that I should tell her about my past life? I want a girl and I don’t care who she U nor what she has been. Just one who can make my life more cheerfuL Can you think
—(Photos from the Katharine Gibbs School. New York.)
shops for suitable clothes at prices that are budgeted carefully within the beginner’s salary. A business wardrobe this summer might include, according to the Gibbs Budgeteers, the three outfits shown in these pictures. First, the navy blue and white printed dimity (left) with the bow. The purse is white and is patent leather, so that when it gets dirty it may be washed. The gloves are fabric so that they may be quickly washed and dried by morning. The hat is a navy blue rough straw which can be worn
of any girl who could or would have anything to do with a fellow like me? I never have been married. ERNIE. Dear Ernie—The best thing you could do would be to seek anew locality, where your record is not known, and start over. This Is a bad time for any one to get anew job, but it is not impossible. Many people with prison experience have made good afetrwards, including the famous story writer, O. Henry. It is very unfair for people to shun you if your conduct has been exemplary since your release, but that is life. The loss cf the community’s respect is a far greater punishmfer.t than the state inflicts. When you have established anew record for yourself, I do not believe your mistake will be any bar to marriage, for women will forgive almost anything in the man they love. When you meet the girl who you expect to marry, it would be better to tell her the truth and throw yourself on her mercy, for if you don’t tell her somebody else will. I do not know any girl for you at the present time, but you will find your own if you circulate. Lawrence Girl Is Wedded in Church Service Miss Pauline Plummer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Plummer of Lawrence, was married Sunday afternoon to George W. McDaniel, son of Martin L. McDaniel, in the chapel of the Grace M. E. church. The Rev. B. Brooks Shake read the ceremony. The bride wore a pink chiffon and lace dress with a blue velvet girdle. Her accessories were of blue and she carried a shower bouquet of Joanna Hill roses and delphinium. Miss Plummer was graduated from Butler university and is a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. McDaniel attended Purdue university and Washington, university in St. Louis. WEDDING OF CITY PAIR ANNOUNCED Marriage of Miss Catherine Griffin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Griffin, 3421 Carrollton avenue, to Harold Pfisterer on March 26, was announced at a luncheon bridge given Saturday by her sister, Mrs. Earl L. Ferguson of Milwaukee at the Columbia Club. Mr. Pfisterer is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pfisterer, 3525 Guilford avenue. DEPARTMENT CLUB IN STUDIO PROGRAM The Women's Department Club I art department gave an informal studio program Saturday afternoon at the studios of E. H. Daniels, sculptor, and Joseph M. Henninger, painter, 709 East Maple road. The program was the final affair of a series of social events which hi.ve been held during the first American joint exhibition of painting and sculpture. Robert T. Miller gave a gallery talk. Mr. Daniels and Mr. F.enninger also made brief remarks. Mrs. Paul T. Payne, chairman of the art department, was in charge. Gallery attendants from the Junior League, one of the sponsors of the exhibit, were Miss Ruth Hodges and Mary Louise Minnick. Friday afternoon at a tea given by a group from the John Herron Art Institute, Mrs. Thomas Harvey Cox and Mrs. Louise Haerle were attendants. Call Council Session Regular meeting of the Central Council will be held Tuesday night at the Washington. Officers will be elected. Old and new officers of the Epsilon. Epsilon Alpha and Epsilon Beta chapters will attend.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
with a silk outfit as well. , Every one has a silk office dress and most business women are especially fond of polka dots. A dress, center, has shoulder epaulets and tiny organdie cuffs with a hand rolled edge. The bow at the neck is of organdie too—quickly laundered and replaced with minimum trouble. Silk Ensemble Good Then for the special best workaday costume that may be worn on those nights when the tired business woman dines with the tired business man there is this silk ensemble (right) comprising a coat with cape sleeves and a dress of black and white printed silk. The crepe coat, unlined, may be worn over other dresses, too. When short-sleeve dresses are worn, long sleeves must be added to the costume. There are some fashions which the business woman must take and many >that she must leave alone. For instance, the all-white costume. Fashionable as it is, the office worker will find that it is more trouble than it is worth. Laundry work must be done almost every night, if it is to appear spotless and fresh. Soiled and mussy white dresses are, of course, reason enough for putting even an efficient stenographer on the firing line. Summer Dress Hints perishable trimmings like, feathers and white flowers on hats hardly withstand being caught in more than one summer shower. Remember in purchasing shoes that light leathers and light fabrics are not advocated for economical dressing. Hosiery should be bought in three-pair lots. There’s a non-wrinkable linen that is recommended for office wear in dark colors. Chiffqns for office wear are decidedly unapproved. Tailored sheers are, however, suggested for hot weather. Among the don’ts for business women is found the fashion of red finger nails. Jewelry if it is elaborate also is forbidden. Cosmetics may be used wisely, but not too much, which shows the change in the secretary of today and the secretary of before the war. BRIDGE FETE HELD FOR BRIDE-ELECT Miss Nadyne Cook, who will be married Saturday to Don Emerson Warrick, was honored at a bridge party and miscellaneous . shower given Saturday afternoon in Martinsville. The hostesses were Mrs. Austin Sweet, Martinsville; Mrs. Robert S. Fitzgerald, Anderson, and Miss Maurine Jacquith, Indianapplis. The party was held at the Sweet home. Guests were: Mesdames Wildey B. Cook, mother of the bride-elect; W. M. Wilson, C. R. Wilson, R. E. Snick, Harold S. Cross, Wayne W. Warrick. Paul V. Brown, Norman Green. Robert Hammond. Albert G. Mueller. Floyd Fults, Robert C. Schetter. Robert L. Nipper, Loren Hickman, Robert S. Mannfeld, Russell Holler, O. S. Jacquith, Misses Frances Jacquith. Sarah Burke and Charlotte Comstock of Indianapolis and Mrs. Hugh Kinnard of Pendleton. FRIENDLY SOCIETY TO HOLD DINNER Girls’ Friendly Society of Christ Episcopal church will hold its regular dinner meeting at 6 Tuesday. New officers to be installed are Miss Virginia Wat wood, members chairman; Miss Alba Rogers, vice-mem-bers chairman; Miss Mary Lawton, secretary; Miss Augusta Heberlin, treasurer; Misses Elizabeth Poole and Arlene Nease, executive members at large; Miss Jean Wilson, publicity chairman, and Miss Velma Runyan, members delegate. D. OF I. TO GIVE BENEFIT PARTY Daughters of Isabella will entertain with a benefit card party Saturday, June 18, at the BannerWhitehill auditocium. Hostesses will be: Miss Gertrud* Murphy, regent, and the Misses Josephine Tobin. Elisabeth Murphy, Nell* Schlotter, Kathleen Reidy, Mayme Reilly, Emilia Vanier, Irene Daugherty, Helen Leonard, Betty Ellis, Mayme Murphy, Mary Davey. Margaret Brand, Agnes Mahoney, Helen M. Reidy and Statia O'Connell and Mesdames Robert V. Fessler, Joseph J. Speaks. Wilfred J. Overmire, Frank B. Healy, Ed Trimpe, Eleanor Reibel, Karl Kramer, Frank Kirkhoff, C. A. Gauss. F. J. Pfleger, Paul Kramer and Georgia Whitaker. Amigo'S Club to Elect Officers will be elected at a meeting of the Amigos Club at 8:15 ‘benight at the home of Donald McGovern, 242 North Arsenal avenue. Presiding officers will be James Salladay. Plans for the summer will be made and all members are requested to gttend. The officers will be installed in July.
Psi lota Xi Girls Head for Muncie State convention of the Psi lota Xi sorority will be held Tuesday and Wednesday in Muncie. Grand officers of the sorority are meeting there today for a preliminary session. Mis Thelma Sines, Ft. Wayne, Is the grand president, and has issued the call to convention. The other grand officers who will attend are: Mrs. Alice McKinney, Jeffersonville, grand vice-president: Mrs. Ann Duemling, Ft. Wayne, grand secretary; Miss Margaret Loveless, Fortville. grand treasurer; Miss Iria Kaufman. Summitville, grand conductress. and Mrs. Wanit* Stahr, Hagerstown, charity chairman. The program will open Tuesday morning with registration at the Y. W. C. A. During the afternoon there will be a business session and an inspection of the day nursery sponsored by the Muncie chapter, followed by a tea. At 6:30 there will be a dinner-bridge at the Country Club. Wednesday morning there will be a breakfast at 9 at the Y. M. C. A. followed by a business session. At 10 the delegates will be entertained with a garden luncheon at the hofne of Miss Mary Louise Carmichael, one of the Psi lota Xi founders. A business session will be held in the afternoon. At 6:30 the thirtyfifth anniversary dinner and entertainment will be held at the Country Club, closing the convention. Psi lota Xi is a national sorority organized for charitable and social purposes. Miss Elsbury a Bride Mrs. Elsie A. Elsbury has announced the marriage of her daughter, Miss Lenore Elsbury, to Norman Lantz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel T. Lantz. The wedding took place Thursday evening at the Hillside Christian church. They will be at home at Pekin, HI.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send Pat- OQ n tern No. & \j Size Street City - State Name
’ll
CHARMING MODEL FOR CHILD It can be made in a great many different fabrics. It all depends upon whether young daughter wishes to wear it for parties, ’’best” or everyday occasions. For parties, taffeta, crepe de chine or chiffon in darling in pale blue, pink or daffiodil yellow. , For simple “best,” a crepe de chine print in light navy blue and white is cute idea as sketched. The yoke that merges into capelet sleeves is plain navy crepe. It’s most practical. Style No. 290 is designed for sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years.. Size 8 requires IVs yards of 35-inch material with % yard of 35-inch contrasting. Red and white polka-dotted dimity with plain white, nile green linen with yellow and orchid and white checked tissue gingham with plain orchid gingham are striking combinations, truly Frehch. Our Summer Fashion Magazine will help you economize. Price of pattern, 15 cents, in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
KEEP YOUR HUSBAND'S LOVE TTIE pain that A women suffer 9k' every month is bad 1 M enough. But the W .< W trouble it causes at V home is worse. \ ■ Men soon tire of ir- . ritable wives. What is a woman to do? Generation after generation has found answer in this Vegetable Compound; As Mrs. June says,"There is nothing better forthat tired feeling we all know so well. It helped my nervousness and built me up.*
VEGETABLE COMPOUNO
—what:s in fashion— I Bathing Suits Far Cry From 90s —■■■■■■■ ■—■ Directed by AMOS PABRISB- .... ...
NEW YORK, June 13.—The flapping-skirted bathers of the nineties would reach out limp hands for their smelling salts if they were confronted with the beachfuls of 1932 swimmers we’ll be seeing this summer. “Bathers” and “swimmers” expresses it. For if you’re going to crawl and dive in the modern manner, you want a 1932 suit that's meant for business. Snug, short, low-to-nothingness in the back, with not an inch to flap or bulge. Anita Page, lovely screen star, wears a suit that’s not only backless, but also cut out porthole fashion under the arms. All the suits are so brief that you’d wonder how the designers could do anything with what’s left of them. They’re done plenty. Back Buttons Dp Like crossing “suspender straps over entirely bare backs. Or making a back that can be worn low or buttoned up high when you’re had enough suntan. The one-piece, tiny-skirted suit is launching on a busy summer. Newer ia the maillot (pronounced my-o), the one-piece suit which has no skirt unlfss it puts on a separate one over its shorts, as does the suit sketched. Fashion's two - in -one complex shows up here, too. For lots of these little extra skirts are circular and may be slung capelike over your shoulders. Capes aren’t the only dress detail that bathing suits have appropriated, either. Makes Waists Look Slimmer We’ve noticed suits with fine diagonal tickings and seamings, making the waists look even slimmer. And some of them have twisted belts and girdles. Another v;ay suits have taken a tip from dresses is in the materials. You’ll see the usual jersey ones, often ribbed . . . but lot* of them are smartly hand knit, or in meshy wools in new wavy-line effect* or boucle weaves. Ribbed or meshy effects make particularly good-looking white suit*. (And white suits, by the way, are made double or lined this year.) Blues, so plentiful on the street, Theta Chapter Installation Is Due Tonight Formal installation of Theta chapter, Alpha Omicron Alpha sorority, will be held tonight at the home of Mrs. Ned Schuster, 501 East Twenty-third street. Mrs. J. R. Stentney, national president, and Mrs. Roy True of Delta chapter, will assist. Officers to be installed are Miss Dorothy Spurlock, president; Mrs. Ross Richards, vice-president; Miss Mabel Krentler, secretary; Miss Thelma Krentler, treasurer; Miss Ellen Walsh, publicity, and Mrs. George Patridge, council delegate. The sorority is a charitable organization, affiliated with the Needlework-Guild. It Is a sponsor of Phyllis Wheatley branch of the Y. W. C. A. Leah Schatz to Wed, Mrs. Hattie Schatz, 576 East Fall Creek boulevard, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Miss Leah Schatz, to Samuel Schensul, Kakamazoo, Mich. The wedding date has not been set.
Strikingly, Radically New Phantom* Kotex SANITARY NAPKIN (U. S. Pot. No. 1,857,854) Most Important Improvement In sanitary protec- A tfon since the Invention jSSKpt '% of Kotex itself In 1920. W-" I flunk 9 AT LAST! A radically new design in sani- B tary protection. You are scarcely aware that * - you have it on. Made, of course, by Kotex i.•••*■• Jm —originators of the modern sanitary’napkin. JH ■ 'K.; It is called PHANTOM * KOTEX. Why? fl ’* Because the ends are so flattened and tapered IS ' that it leaves no outlines even under the -f y -"’\ “ 4 * v closest-fitting of gowns. Not the slightest bulk 888 suggested even under the filmiest of summer silks. And—for those who require extra pro- % tection Super-Phantom Kotex is ideal. There’s extra protective surface but the ends 0' if;are so skilfully flattened as to be completely .MiMfiaß inconspicuous. Wmim A < % Kotex features retained ||IL }. , y 818 The new Kotex is called _ .. „ c , , ! Bni PHANTOM* KOTEX The special kotex features you have always UHSm HMH because-, „„ aeatcal, appreciated are retained, of course. It is soft mfflmm,.' realize you are after hours of use; w onderfully absorbent; wearing it I treated 10 deodorize; can be worn, with equal pPPy/ iW M protection, on either side; disposable, easily. j JbBHhPI kotex!l More than 24 million pads were used in \ flat:ene<J pM so th hospitals alone last year. completelT Insist upon getting genuine Kotex, when | j Gr#, .ceurity-The you buy it already wrapped. Each tapered, end | ; 4§j oootb.au*fit*;veigreaief of the new pad is stamped Kotex new- f SHHK; 4 before experienced, so you can’t get inferior substitutes. $ J9HBHHH9p||i iotin*i y soit-dupotabi#-Kotex prices are today the lowest in Kotex } \ SncTfc^huh“tr^u history. This new’improvement comes to you j famous Disposable timy*. at no increase in price. All dealers have the j new PHANTOM KOTEX. [ WSBi Hrm KoUx 8,t ' " arrow hmobl., only 35c -Vt it BBBißßiii with the new phantom KOTEX. The com biaacion HOW SHALL I TELL MY DAUGHTER? 1 “SoWpTeteiy^coa^: Many a mother wonders. Now you simply °u protection. hand your daughter the little booklet entitled, <v?TT '* h ~- ir ~ “Marjorie May’s Twelfth Birthday.” For free copy, address Mary Pauline Callender, Room 2140, 180 North Michigan Avr, Chicago, 111. ■HHBBBUBBflBl?:. Hrfr - JfIBBIB ■■■—■ MOTE I Kotex —new at year dealer's —marked "Form-Fitting” is the new Phantom Kotex .ih in —mi __ —• '■ l -
are migrating to the beach also. And reds signal attention wherever you look...especially the lovely new raspberry shade. Green and tangerine have their supporters, too. Used solidly, or in the "white-and” combination* that so many women like. When these active, trim suits drip out of the waves to park or promenade on the sand, skirt* or slacks
MARRIAGE IS ANNOUNCED
*>■ . |
Announcement has been made of the TnUTTluyo of Miss Patricia Mallory, daughter of Patrick Mallory, to George D. Sisson Jr. The wedding took place May 27.
Personals
Among guest* at the Edgewater Beach at Chicago are Miss Mary Cummins, 4166 Washington boulevard; A. E. Baker, 417 East Thirtyseventh street, and E. A. Crane, 3646 Washington boulevard. * Miss Alida Sherwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hartley Sherwood, 2847 North Meridian street, sailed Saturday on the French liner Paris, for Havre, where she will spend a short time. Dr. L. C. Trent and Mrs. Trent, 411 North Arsenal avenue, and daughter, Miss Roberta Trent, left today for Evanston, 111., to attend commencement exercises at Northwestern university. Dr. and Mrs. Trent’s son, Leonard Trent, is a member of the graduating class. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Matson, 4505 Park avenue, have left on a motor trip through the east. They will attend commencement exercises at Dartmouth, where their son, Frederick George Matson, will be graduated. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell S. Fisher, University Heights, and daughter, Margaret, have returned from Taylor university, where they attended commencement activities. They were accompanied by Miss Harriet Keefauver, who has gone to Greenville and Dayton, 0., for a visit. Mrs. Frederick M. Ayres and daughter. Miss Anne Ayres, are registered at the Roosevelt in New York. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Clark, 3322 Guilford avenue, have as their guests, Mr. and Mrs. George L. Clarjc and family, of Urbana, 111.
JUNE 13, 1932
are pulled over them Or maybe 4 cozy terry robe. Feet slip into gay sandals or thosi amusing wooden sahote. Floppybrimmed hat* spread a jkft>se*-*ing tent over sun-tanned laces. And you can’t make up your mind whether these 1932 mermaids look slicker bathing or basking! (Coovrieht. 1932. Amos Parrish> Next—Washable silk •’spectator'* dresses.
Mrs. George Sisson
Marie Roth to Become Bride of Edward Dux Miss Marie Roth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Roth of Beech Grove, will be married at 9 Wednesday morning to Edward F. Dux Jr., in the Holy Name Catholio chuVch. Attendants will be Miss Margaret Roth, maid of honor; Misses Thelma Rollins and Elizabeth Roth, bridesmaids; Berniece Eilen Thrall, flower girl, and Charles Wakelam, ring bearer. Robert H. Dux will be best man and ushers will be Arthur Zip and Francis J. Dux. The Rev. Victor Dux. O. S. B. of St. Meinrad abbey, brother of the bridegroom, will read the ceremony. Theta Sigmas to Meet Alpha chapte'r of the Theta Sigma Delta sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Alma Louise Arnold, 1401 Olive street.
FREE—FREE HAIR BOBBING bring this coupon Tuesday morning 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. we will 808 your HAIR absolutely FREE, under the expert supervision of Mr. Irl. We rater to both men and women on hair dyeing. CENTRAL BEACTT COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bid*. Lincoln 0432 Where the Best Students Are
