Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 52, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 July 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Dates Set for Parley at Chicago July 18 to 22, 1933, has been chosen as the date tor the international congress which will be held by the National Council of Women m Chicago, where the national council headquarters are located. Miss Lena Madesin Phillips of ew York, president, has announced that 1,000,000 signatures will be sought for petitions to be delivered to foreign governments asking them to send representatives. Among those who have affixed their names are Miss Lucy Anthony, whose aunt, Miss Susan B. Anthony was prominent in activities of a similar congress held in 1393; Miss Alice Stone Blackwell, daQghter of Mrs. Lucy Stone; Mary Pickford Mme. Schumann-Heink, former Congresswoman Ruth Bryan Owen Congresswoman Ruth Baker Pratt and other famous women.

MANNERS v*°MORALS jORDA/y

X7'OUNG people in love are invited A to bring their problems to Jane Jordan, who will give them the benefit of her advice in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man years of age, seriously in love with a very sensible airl of 20. The girl cares for me, but. says she does not want really to fall in love with any one yet; that there is too much for us, as Individuals, to do while we still arc ao young and that we should not become serious, but just be good friends instead. I arrj unemployed and am unable to afford to take her to places that I would like, so have to content myself with Just being in her company about one evening a week. X en.tov her comnanv tremendously. but each time I see her I feel the hopelessness of my love. I thought it best to try to forget her, so have been going with other g.rls practically every night, having a good time, but not forgetting. I do think that if I continue to keep awav from tills girl. I eventually will rras'p the vividness of her from mv mind. She Is the one girl I would like to marry some dav. and for that, reason X am unable to determine whether I am doing the right thing. WAYNE. Dear Wayne—ls I were you, I wouldn't take the young lady’s statements too seriously. What she says is that she doesn’t want to fall In love with any one yet. What she means is that she does not want to fall in love with any one until it pays her to do so. She is just as eager to fall in love as any other young girl of 20, but she makes her head rule her heart, and she doesn’t intend to be torn by a futile emotion for a man who is unable to support her in a fitting manner. The majority of women are husband hunters, but the smartest ones never let men suspect it. Your young lady has built up a plausible defense by saying that she is too young to fall in love, and there still is so much to do before one gets married. Bravo! And what is your Here’s Good reaction? It r f makes you all the oUl!se 101 more eager to Other Girls, change her mind for her. Other young ladies who write asking how to bring a man to the point, please take notice. The girl who makes herself difficult to obtain is the one who diligently is most sought. The girl who hides her desire to get married is the one who inspires the proposals. At this point, Wayne, your cue is to think less about love and more about work. You are handicapped by an industrial situation unequaled in the history of the country. The ordinary man accepts it. The extraordinary man licks it. Don’t give up the girl until you have hustled like mad for ’ohe wherewithal to substantiate your proposal. My picture makes the young lady sound like a pretty cold commercial proposition, but She Shows this is not necessarily the case. If lnat one every girl had her Has Sense, sound common sense in the choice of a partner, fewer marriages would go up in smoke. Falling in love is not entirely beyond human control. The effort to guide love wisely by using the reason is highly commendable. Sooner or later, every marriage is subjected to the stress and strain of living. Emergencies arise which require some capital for a dignified solution. Love and bliss rarely survive penury. A wise young girl with plenty of time to find a suitable husband guards against letting her emotions fly toward the first man who asks her. If you really want this girl, don’t give up without a struggle. Let your love inspire you to anew resourcefulness in business. Prove that you are a person equal to severe emergencies. When your prestige thus is increased by your own attainments, try yoxxr luck with the girl again. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a widow with four children to make a livine for. I live near mv in-laws and they have been very ualv to me. They set mv children at their house and sav uaiv things to them about me and mv mother, who helos me. Thev never help me in anv wav. Do vou think thev could have cared much for the children’s father and let the little ones co huncrv as thev do. if I do not earn enough to feed them? How shall X treat them? AN 89-POUND MOTHER. DEAR 89-POUND MOTHER— The surest method of disarming an enemy is to treat him with generosity. Treat your in-laws with courtesy, and burn their heads with coals of fire. I can not tell whether these people loved the children’s father or not. Their conduct toward the children is not very encouraging, but the only thing you can do is to ignore it. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l would like to tell C A. my own life story, which is the outcome of such a love afTair as she describes. I did the same thing to ••save” me erstwhile lover. I then married the man who seemed dearer to me than mv own life We were happy for a while. Then I found I could not trust him. and he cared for) me no more than for his other lady friend? X tried leaving him twiee, Since It is all over. I tool back with an utterly crushed heart to think I threw my future awav. I was young then and had buxine?* opportunities which would have kept my mind occupied I wish it were in my power to describe my mental torture and remorse. Whether peoole know it or not. it is constantly on mv mind and I can't get away from it. A BROKEN HEART. Dear Broken Heart—One failure does not constitute a broken life by any manner of means. Don't be so ready to admit defeat. The generosity which inspired this mistake easly can be transformed into a virtue instead of a weakness.

MENCKEN HELD IDEAL HUSBAND

Wife Declares Caustic Editor Is Model in Home Life

BY JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer Baltimore, July 11. The “wolrd's most famous bachelor” has turned out to be a model husband! We have Mrs. Henry L. Mencken's own word for it. Married now for nearly two years, she testifies to the satisfactory domesticity of Henry L. Mencken, caustic editor of the American Mercury, cynic extraordinary in regard to feminine charm, whose slashing opinions have done more to disillusion the younger generation than those of any other American. What is more, Mrs. Mencken positively advocates bachelors for husbands! She is 30. He is 50. "It stands to reason that a bachelor would make a good husband,” she told me in her soft, leisurely voice, with a little of Montgomery, Ala., in it. "A bachelor is likely to be much more interesting, because he has had a more varied life. “Then, he is set in his ways. Instead of that making life hard, it works both ways. “I think . It is pleasant to live with someone who knows what he wants. It Is comparatively Simple to manage things. It is fumbling indecision which clutters life up. ana Henry is prompt, another good bachelor trait. I think pron |jtness is a great quality. It is a form of politeness not to keep folks waiting. I think the world goes round on little things. “Last, and I guess most important to a woman,” Mrs. Mencken smiled a little. “I think a bachelor is apt to be much more thoughtful of his companion. “He is more conscious of her. He never just accepts his wife as part of the household.” Seeing Mrs. Mencken and talking with her gives you the idea that no man ever could just accept her. She is perfectly lovely! A little plump, for she has had tuberculosis twice and guards against a third attack by keeping her weight up, quite young looking, she has that soft, rich, white skin no picture catches, big black eyes with a quiet humor lighting them up, and exquisitely fine, soft black hair that waves from her face and curls up a", the ends. It is her manner, probably, that “gets you.” Here is a woman who has genuine repose! She seems to have all the best Southern lady qualities: dignity, a fine hospitable consideration for her guest. a a a ONE reason for the Menckens’ happy marriage, obviously, is that they never breakfast together. “No one has anything to say at that time of day,” she explained. “I think people are much too preoccupied to be sociable early In the day. I want my papers and mail and Henry wants his!” The rest of their day runs something like this: Work from 912; Mrs. Mencken managing the house, marketing and so forth, Henry working in one wing of the big apartment in his office filled with bookcases, easy chairs, and a grand piano. They meet at lunch, then both rest. From 2:30 to 5:30, work again, be back in his study, she in hers, writing, in long hand, with a pencil. Their apartment, built in an old mansion, is sprawling, with various levels, and so arranged that his friends or hers can come in without disturbing the other. Unless they dine out, which is seldom, after an early dinner, they work again from 7 to 10. From then on they hold open house, with friends dropping in for music, talk, anagrams, beer and pretzels or ginger-beer. Every Saturday night the same fourteen musicians gather in Henry’s studio for a concert, and they have gathered every Saturday night for thirty years. Henry plays the piano—and well.

“IyAKRIAGE hasn't changed !▼! Henry a bit-,” Mrs. Mencken insisted. “He still likes to drink beer, even more than ever. He never was a real cynic about marriage. "He just held some views about life and marriage and was frank in discussing them. I never think of Henry as a radical. He always has seemed a conservative and very conventional.” The Menckens keep no pets, take no active exercise, don’t like a radio, haven't a car. Henry is a great gardener, she insists, given the garden. He is interested in his new home, in the details of food and house, provided he doesn’t have to do anything about either. He eats everything, is fondest of stews of all kinds, never helps with the dishes, or any other work, but loves to roam with Mrs. Mencken through antique shops or second-hand stores looking for Victorian things. She collects Victorian pinboxes, etiquette books and scrap books; he wood carvings and beer seidels. BBS THEIR home reflects their Victorian preferences. "I was brought up in a southern home where all the furniture was Victorian,” Mrs. Mencken explained. “And Henry is Victorian.” Their whole house is, for that matter, and charming. Some of the handsome carved chad's and low sofas and marble-topped tables were hers, some his, some they bought together. The most noticeable things are an authentic Victoran wedding certificate, signed by Henry and Mrs. Henry, framed ard hanging on the wall, and two white doves under big glass bells facing each other on the mantelpiece. Mrs. Mencken writec under her own name, Sara'Haardt. She is no Lucy Stoner. But her book and her various articles were all signed that. ♦ So she will continue to use it for her work. “Life runs along pleasantly and smoothly and not too fast,” she analyzes it. "Both Henry and I enjoy a routine that gives us time for work, time for play and time for seeing the friends we like to have drop in. "I don’ think either of us ever would be happy where the tempo of life is faster. This just suits 'Us perfectly.”

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In a real Victorian frame characteristic of the period in which they have chosen to decorate their home . . . behold Henry L. Mencken, Benedick, and Sara Haardt, his wife of nearly two years . . . who says bachelor Henry has turned into t he best of all possible husbands.

Mrs. Murray Chairman for P.-T. Congress Mrs. J. L. Murray has been appointed general chairman of • the annual state convention of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, which will meet Oct. 17 to 20. Mrs. W. J. Hockett of Ft. Wayne, president, recently announced the date and committees. Mrs. Clayton Ridge is program chairman and Mrs. S. M. Myers, president of the Indianapolis federation, assistant chairman. Other officers of the congress are: Mrs. M. W. Blair, Terre Haute, vicepresident; Mrs. Bruce Maxwell, recording secretary; Mrs. Thomas M. Ross, Evansville, treasurer; Mrs. R. A. Acher, Terre Haute, historian, and Dr. Edna Hatfield Edmondson, Bloomington, executive secretary.

CALIFORNIANS ARE GUESTS AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Ensley, 441 Grant avenue, entertained at dinner Sunday night in honor of their guests, Mrs. Arthur Dean, Long Beach, Cal.; Mrs. Alfred Carver, Riverside, Cal., and Mrs. Joseph Bishop, San Diego, Cal. Other guests were Mr. and, Mrs. Walter Hayden, Chicago; Miss Pauline Fryberger, Noblesville; Robert Davis, Anderson; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Deane and Charles Leslie, Indianapolis. The California guests and Mr. and Mrs. Hayden left for their homes today. MILFORD MILLER TO WED SATURDAY Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Miller, 5234 North New Jersey street, will go to Evansville Friday to attend the wedding of their son, Milford M. Miller, to Miss Dorothy Welborn, which will take place Saturday. They will be accompanied by Miss Alice Miller, Robert Miller and S. K. Ruick. f They will attend the family dinner to be given Friday night by William C. Welborn, the bride-elect’s father. The wedding will take place at the Welborn home.

CALIFORNIA VISITOR GUEST AT PARTY Mrs. C. R. Ferguson, Santa Barbara, Cal., formerly of this city, was honored at a garden bridge party given Saturday afternoon by Misses Fern Rhea and Bessie Russell at the home of the latter 20 West Twenty-sixth street. Other guests were Mrs. Randall White, Misses Laura Royce, Olive Wills, Ethel Laswell and Ruth Mabbitt. Mrs. Ferguson, with her husband and son Bobby, is spending a few weeks in Indianapolis. Pythians in Initiation Myrtle Temple of Pythian Sisters will hold initiation for candidates at 8 tonight at the K. of P. hall, 119 East Ohio street. Miss Harrison Weds Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Harrison, 2639 North Illinois street, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Helen, to Robert C. Kennedy, which took place June 26 at their home. Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy are at home at 746 Orange street.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Watermelon cones. French omelet, graham muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Tongue and celery salad, whole wheat bread and butter sandwiches, blackberry shortcake with cream, lemonade. Dinner — Planked salmon with potato marbles and spinach timbales, salad of tomato stuffed with cabbage and green pepper, cantaloupe sherbet, macaroons, milk, coffee.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- A. 7 7 tern No. ‘*ll Size Street City State Name

Jijiii |||| 477 U

Don’t you think it lovely to have a dress with a certain amount of swishiness about its hem, for more formal occasions? A delicious print in chiffon made today’s model in white with splashy red flowers. The soft crepe silk girdle toned with the print. It’s a dress that would grace any summer afternoon or do delightful duty for informal evening wear. It's just the dress you need for week-end vacations. Sheer chiffon voiles also are charming and satisfactory. They tub beautifully. Style No. 447 is designed for sizes 14. 16, 16, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 4 yards of 39-inch material with l’w yards of 35-inch contrasting. Price of pattern, 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully. Call Council Session Central council of Epsilon Sigma Alpho sorority will have a dinner meeting at 5:45 Tuesday night at the Washington.

EVANS' EWE FOR All PURPOSES

Children to Be Entertained at Mission Picnic Children from the families of the Indianapolis Flower Mission tuberculosis patients will be entertain at a picnic to be given Tuesday at “Bonnie Brae,” the home of Mrs. David Ross, president of the mission. There will be ninety children in the group. Mrs. I. E. Rush, chairman of the child welfare committee of the Indianapolis Council of Women, is in charge, assisted by members of her committee and the Flower Mission board of directors. This is the committee’s contribution to the work of the mission. Games and a story-telling hour will occupy the morning hours. The Polk Milk Company is contributing 160 bottles of milk; the Omar Baking Company, bread; Lindner Brothers, ice cream, and Mrs. Ross, cookies for the picnic lunch. Edward and Leroy New, radio performers, will give several instrumental and vocal numbers and readings. A group of children which has been trained by Miss Norma Koster of the city recreation department, will give dance numbers. Members of the committee assisting Mrs. Rush are: Mrs. Allen T. Fleming, vice-chairman; Mesdames Ruby Strickler. Rulus O’Harrow, Charles Hogate, Fred Noerr, Robert Hoss Dennis, Alexander Jameson, Albert J. Huber, Alfred Buschmann, W. E. Evans and J. P. Cochran.

Personals

Mrs. W. M. O'Hearn, 2239 North New Jersey street, her granddaughter, Mary Ellen Schneider, and niece, Ruth Urmston, have returned from a motor trip to New York City and other eastern cities. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Townsend, 2919 North Pennsylvania street, left Sunday on a motor trip to Canada. They were accompanied by their niece, Miss Primrose Selden of Cedar Rapids. la., and Miss Betty Hammerstadt, 2921 North Pennsylvania street. Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. Goulden, 25 East Forty-sixth street, and daughter Sonya have gone to Indian lake to spend several weeks. Among the recent arrivals at the Woldorf-Astoria are Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Aufderheide and daughter Joan, 4950 North Meridian street; C. L. Coen and C. C. Coen, 5251 Washington boulevard, and R. R. Mulvihill, 3829 North New Jersey street. John. George and James Esterline, sons of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Esterline, 5105 North Meridian street, will leave Tuesday for New York. They will sail Wednesday for a two months’ tour of Europe. Mr. and Mrs. Ruell Moore, 1032 West Thirty-fifth street, have returned from a month's visit in Daytona Beach., Fla. They have as | their guest. Miss Eleanor Estes of j Orlando, Fla. Mrs. George Philip Meier, 3128 | North Pennsylvania street, visited Mrs. Leon Stern at Terre Haute last week. While there she leci tured on “Famous Hands.” Mrs. Stern also has as her guest Mrs. i Louis Ludlow of Washington, D. C. Miss Joan De Haven was the week-end guest of Miss Mary Louise Morris of South Bend. Miss Broum Bride Announcement is made of the marriage of Miss Madge Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest ' Brown, Memphis, Tenn., to Robert | Thomas. The wedding took place I July 1 in Indianapolis, at the home ! of Mr. and Mrs. Burt E. Kimmel, 2058 North New Jersey 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 cater to both men and women on hair dyeing. CENTRAL. REALTY COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bldg. T.lnroln 0432 Where the Best Students Are.

Arts Affair to Be Held by To-Kalon A program promoting social and mental culture by the medium of music and painting will be presented by the To-Kalon Club, which meets the second and fourth Tuesday of every month. A program committee composed of Mesdames Myron J. McKee. Melissa Jane Polk and C. Frederick Schmidt has arranged meetings for the coming year, the first being a president s day observance Oct. 11. With the theme that “music is a stimulant to mental exertion,” this first gathering will be a musical tea at the Marott. Charles T. Ferry, composer and pianist, will be on the program. A special Christmas party is scheduled Dec. 20. with election to take place March 14. Guest day will be observed May 9 at the Avalon Country Club. Among the subjects of the meetings will be studies of Rockwell Kent. “Our First National Airs,” Eugene Savage. Stephen Collins Foster. Robert Winthrop Chandler, the organ: Mary Cassatt, John Philip Sousa, George Bellows. Reginald DeKoven. Cecilia Beaux. Ethelbert Nevin and Arthur Bowen Davies. Officers are Mrs. William J. Kopp, president: Mrs. F. P. Van Der Veer, vice-president; Mrs. Harriett Burtch, recording secretary; Mrs. Carl Bruenger, corresponding secretary, and Mrs. James Hornstein, treasurer. The board of directors is composed of Mesdames O. T. Behymer, E. M. Duffey, F. B. Hunter, H. M. Cochrane and C. F Schmidt. Delegate to the local council is Mrs. Lawson O'Malley. Mrs. Duffey is state federation secretary and Mrs. Behymer, parliamentarian. The membership numbers t wentyone. The club was founded February, 1921, and was reorganized May, 1929. It is a member of the State Federation of Clubs.

SIXTY ENTER IN CITY GOLF TOURNAMENT

The medal play tournament of the Indianapolis Women’s Golf Association at Willowbrook today was an informal affair with foursomes teeing-off without official pairings. The course which is a short-hole affair was to be played by a field of approximately sixty. Mrs. E. William Lee, Mrs. Sam Goldstein and Mrs. Alfred L. Piel, officers of the association, were in charge. The prizes were to be balls. Starched Collars Again It has been a long time since starched collars and cuffs have been worn. But now they’re in again. Starched lace collars are a-new idea. Cuffs of newest mesh gloves also are stiffened with starch.

I Daily Recipe CORNED BEEF HASH Cut three onions and three green peppers small and cook tern slowly in three tablespoons butter. Peel eight small potatoes that just have been boiled in their jackets and cut them in small dice shapes. Cut a pound of cooked corned beef in small pieces the same size as the diced potatoes. Mix meat and potatoes together, then put in with onions and peppers. Add three cups of the liquid in which the corned beef was boiled, also two tablespoons cream. Cover the dish, put it in a slow oven and let it cook for an hour. Uncover and place under the broiler to brown. Put a poached egg and some cauliflower and spinach on each plate.

MOTHER— Watch this Girl. .. This is the Time You Should he on Your Guard

Jl WUm jlj “My back bothers me,” she quietly complains . . .“I guess I’ll he doun. ” Hate you ever felt this uay yourself? Despondent, Listless Girls CHE LOOKS despondent, worn- ing and unhappiness later on. Pain ACCEPTED household remedy. O out an d depressed. Young girls destroys beauty. Worry mins the The very f act that it’s been in use buddmginto womanuood often get disposition. a long< long time< gives women quiet and fistful. Lassitude over- That’s why so many attractive extra confidence. They know it takesthem. They should he watched! young women become faded pre- must be good ... or so many I have a headache,” they quietly maturely. The pretty girl of 18 be- women wouldn’t take it. complain. "My back bothers me. comes a languid lady at 25. And how true that is! For our **’ B uess e own. Suffering isn’t natural. Remem- records show that 98 out of every These are the symptoms, mother, her that. Ii may be brave and heroic 100 women who write us actually And you should be on your guard. %# . but it’s unnecessary. report benefit from the strengthenDuring this "trying time” every When your daughter becomes ingtreatment of Lydia E. Pinkham’* young girl needs the helpful benefit t ; re d an d listless ... won’t you give Vegetable Compound, o a strengthening medicine like her Vegetable Compound Tablets Ask your druggist for a bottle of y 1a E. Pinkham s vegetable just as other mothers do? For either the tablets or the liquid. Compound. over fifty years this medicine has Don’t postpone for another day the Neglect now only invites suffer- been considered a SAFE and blessed relief this medicine brings. TRY! Lydia E. Pinkham’Vegetable Compound in Tablet Form

What’s in Fashion?

Simple Garb Best for Camp Directed By AMOS PARRISH

NEW YORK. July 11.—“ Roughing it” ... in a more or less civilized way, of course ... is in fashion. Camps in the woods (With modern plumbing) are calling hundreds of folks. The mountain hotel, where “the simple life” is advertised. is luring as many more. One reason why such vacations are popular is because of the clothes worn there. There’s no call for trunks full of them. No place for anything but simplicity. It's smart to live all day from breakfast to dinner in the same costume. Most campers and mountaineers

MISS ALICE YOUNG HOSTESS AT PARTY

Miss Alice Elizabeth Young entertained Friday night at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Young, 443 North Euclid avenue. Her guests were: Misses Mariorie Edmonson. Ramona Eierhart. Edith Spitz. Marianna Collins. Messrs. Joe Edwards. Marvin Edmonson. William Schneider. Cecil Commett and Marvin Seitz.

Card Parties

Membership committee of the , Veterans of Foreign Wars will give j a benefit card party at 2 Tuesday j afternoon at Banner - Whitehill auditorium. There will be a benefit euchre and bunco party at 8:30 Tuesday night at La Velle Gossett Post hall, King avenue and Walnut streets. Mrs. Gertrude Kramer will be in charge. JACOBS CHOSEN AS COUNTY GROUP HEAD Arthur Jacobs was chosen president of the Perry County Association which held its eighth annual reunion Sunday at Brookside park with more than 300 former residents attending. Other officers are: Mrs. Lottv Schpiddegger. vice-president: Lindsay Elder, secretary: Miss Laura Reasor. treasurer, and Charles Howe, social chairman. Speakers following the picnic dinner, games and contests were Mr. Jacobs, William Boogs, John Sullivan, Sol Esarey, Judge Frank Baker and the Rev. Herbert Alvey.

; : Air No. 734 | MB' ! Beautiful || Ivory and s il Green Our Special for This Week $37.7S j

.JULY 11, 1932

find a short-sleeved, lightweight wool dress one of the most satisfactory all-day costumes. White, which can be made to look different by a variety of colored jackets, is a good color scheme if you’re not tearing around unbroken trails. A suit of corduroy or suede-fin-ished cloth is another practical ecstume favored by old timers in roughing it. If it has a high buttoned jacket, you need wear no blouse with it. Unless, of course, the days turns cold, when a lightweight sweater fits comfortably under it. This is a comfortable, durable costume for hiking, mountain climbing and fishing. Younger folks have taken to ankle-length slacks for their all-day costume, topped off with a tailored polo shirt, a striped shirt, or a gay sweater. These slacks are made of jersey, ribbed cotton, terry cloth or duck. And you choose your materials according to the climate. It goes without saying that camp and mountain shoes are stout and low of heel. And that hats are small ... of fabric, generally, or soft felt, with narrowest of brims. Or with no brim at all. One good brimless hat is the hand-crocheted cap. And if you haven't yet sent for your copy of our free directions for making one. fill in the coupon. Directions will be sent you at once. (Coovright. 1932. bv Amos Parrish)

AMOS PARRISH. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES N. T. FASHION BUREAU. 500 FIFTH AVE., N. Y, I inclose stamped, addressed, return envelope. Please send your free bulletin of Directions for Making a Crocheted Cap. NAME ST CITY STATE

Next: Men in shirt sleeves can look smart.