Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 89, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1932 — Page 6

PAGE 6

.‘Go Heavy’ on Canning Tomatoes It'* the home canning aeasont T n this, the second article written for The Times and NEA Service, Sister Mary v; W Indianapolis houaevrives suggestions on the canning of tomatoes. BY SISTER MARY NEA Service Writer Since tomatoes are not only one of the easiest and most satisfactory vegetables to can, but also are the most valuable from the viewpoint of nutrition, every home-maker will And it an economy to can them in quantity. Nutrition specialists at the South Dakota State college advise serving tomatoes four times a week. When fresh fruits and a variety of vegetables are lacking, canned tomatoes may be depended upon to supply vitamin C, so necessary for growth and health. Insulated Oven Best An insulated oven with temperature control provides equipment for the coolest method of canning tomatoes. A water bath canner, pressure cooker, steamer or a waterless cooker are all suitable ways for the canning of tomatoes and fruits. To can tomatoes for general use, scald them by placing in a large pan and pouring sufficient boiling water over them to completely cover them. Let stand one minute and|i drain off water. Cover with cold water and slip skins. Cut out stem and hard core. Pack at once into hot, sterilized jars and add one teaspoon salt to each quart. Pour over boiling water or boiling tomato juice to cover, half seal and process in hot water for twen-ty-five minutes, oven at. 275 degrees F. for forty-five minutes and steam pressure cooker at fifteen pounds pressure for ten minutes. To can tomatoes whole, choose rather small, uniform, round ones. Use poorly shaped tomatoes to •make juice. Scald tomatoes carefully. Likely to Soften If they are allowed to stand in scalding water too long they will be soft. Pack whole tomatoes carefully in sterilized jars. Cut other tomatoes in small pieces and simmer about twenty minutes. Strain and pour hot over tomatoes in cans, filling cans perfectly full. Half seal and process in oven at 276 degrees F. for forty-five min utes. It's a good idea to place the cans in a large dripping pan of hot water. Do not let cans touch each other. Tomato juice fills an important place in many menus these days. Even babies are given tomato juice, and when economy must be practiced, tomato juice can take the place of orange juice. Scald tomatoes as usual and cut in pieces. Put in preserving kettle, cover and bring quickly to the boiling point. Crush with a wooden potato masher and cook ten minutes. Strain, Put in Bag Strain'through fine wire sieve or put through a colander and then strain through a cheesecloth bag. Poui into sterilized jars, adding onehalf teaspoon salt to each pint, half seal and process for forty-five minutes in oven heated to 275 degrees F., or twenty-five minutes in hot w'ater bath. To can tomatoes for soup, scald i and cut in pieces as in preceding ! rule. To each quart of cut tomatoes add ’4 cup chopped onion j and V*. cup chopped celery tops. Simmer twenty minutes and rub through a coarse sieve. Put into sterilized jars, adding Vi teaspoon salt to each pint, half seal and process for forty-five minutes in oven at 275 degrees F. or hot water bath for twenty-five minutes. Remembering that details count amazingly in canning. Be sure that jars and covers are smooth and free from bubble holes and cracks. Make Seal Perfect The covers must make a perfect seal and irergularities in either the rim of the cover or the top of the jar will prevent this. Always use new rubbers that are strong and elastic. Stretch the ring to determine its elasticity. It should return to its original size and shape. Sterilize jars, tops and rings before using. To do this, wash the jars, covers and rubbers in hot soap suds. Put jars and covers into the boiler of the hot water bath outfit or any large pan. Completely cover with cold water and bring to the boiling point. Boil fifteen minutes. Add rubbers for last five minutes of boiling. Lift each jar from water as needed and fill immediately. In any method of canning, the jars should not touch each other during the processing. Leave Inch of Air At least an inch of water or air, as in the case of oven canning, should be permitted to circulate around each can. Be sure not to use over-ripe tomatoes. Cut away any soft parts. Even tomatoes, which show smaller percentage of spoilage than other vegetables, should be canned as soon after gathering from the vines as passible. Asa rule, vegetables canned after storage show much higher spoilage than those canned wlth 4 n an hour after harvesting. The condition of vegetables as they are canned, resulting from holding them one, two or three days before canning, makes a decided difference in their keeping qualities.

| A Day’s Menu | Breakfast — Fresh plums, crisp broiled bacon with scrambled eggs, waffles, syrup, milk, coffee. j Luncheon — Teed tomato bouillon, po- , tato-ham salad, baking 1 powder biscuits, sliced ! peaches, cocoanut macaroons, milk, tea. j Dinner — Baked and stuffed bluellsh. steamed potatoes, new beets in border of greens with lemon sauce, blueI berry batter pudding, milk, coffee.

Autumn Shoes Add Striking Touch of Glamour

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Bronze sandals for afternoon, cut high, such as the ones the girl in the picture is wearing, will place you a step or two ahead in the autumn shoe parade. A bronze kid pump, trimmed with brown

BY HELEN WELSHIMER NEA Service Writer NEW YORK. Aug. 23.—1f you are going to put your best foot forward when the autumn style parade swings down the avenue, you must get a shoe that toes the fashion mark. You can’t step out in last seasons piimps and feel that you are walking in the right direction. Shoes are adding a touch of glamour. They have caught the spirit of feminine intrigue that is in frocks and coats and hats, and are growing more deeprative. Instead of using plain, unadorned kid, most fall footwear goes in for detailed work. Leather stitching is a favorite decoration. It comes in a running stitch allover pattern, as well as in beautiful whipped seams and edges. ("NUT-OUTS, which won summer favor, are disappearing as the August moon goes out of the sky. Contrasting leathers such as Lyolene lizard are taking the place of cut-outs. Collar effects of contrasting leathers are also good. Perforations appear, but they are underlaid with contrasting leathers instead of being left open as in the summer. There is something decidedly distinctive about a touch of white, if it is a minute touch, on a black slipper. The type of stitching seen during the summer now is passe, but gimp stitching is new. Even the materials from which shoes are fashioned are more interesting. Lyolene lizard is one of the favorites. It has a high luster with silvery veining. Gray, which disappeared from * the color charts a few years ago, has come back to toe the fashion mark. It is a feminine color and the models it chooses always are high-heeled, alluring afternoon or evening sandals. It prefers suede as a material. Wine kid, and suede have important places, too, in the shoe lineup. Since the vineyard shades have proved so popular for frocks, shoes have adopted them as well. The dark red that goes with the color card from orchards in Bordeaux and Burgundy is effective ■when applied to shoes. n tt a RUSSET calf, bronze kid, brown and black alligator, and brown python are the other favorites. Black and brown shades are

Contract Bridge

BY W. E. MKENNEY Secretary American Bridge League SOME of the most interesting tournament hands are the most difficult to write about, because top score was made as the result of a defective or weak defense put up by the opposition. To be classed as a good player, one must be quick to take advantage of any slip on the part of one’s opponents. , The following hand produced a beautiful triple squeeze—one that could have been defeated by the opponents, but they made the mistake and this declarer took full ad--1 vantage of it.

*A-8 ¥K-6 ♦ Q-4 *K-Q-J-10-6-5-2 *Q-10- [NORTH] 9-6-4 H 5 5-3 ¥B-5-3 IS </) VJ-10- ♦ K-8-5 5 H 9-7 *A-4 Denier 410-9-3 SOUTH *9-8 *7-2 ¥A-Q-4-2 4 A-J-7-6-2 *7-3 to

The Bidding The bidding where the small slapi was made was as follows: South bid bne diamond. West passed and North put in a psychic one-spade bid. He was not worried, as this was a one over one bid and demanded that partner keep the bidding open. He knew that he would get an opportunity to show his suit on the next round and he was endeavoring to lorce a heart lead up t his king and six. South, however, responded with two hearts. This showed a semi-two-suiter—a five-card diamond suit arid sy four-card heart suit. North

the most popular, as usual, but the shoes that match costumes are having wider popularity than they have had for several seasons. The monk shoe is designed to take a leading place in the shoe procession. It features a high cut over the insteps with concealeu elastic gore and a small strap and buckle. It covers the foot more thoroughly than any other model, outside of a plain oxford, has done

Women Golfers of Avalon Clufi Start Tourney Women golfers of the Avalon Country club started on their 'annual club championship tournament with the qualifying round this morning. Play will continue through Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday. Mrs. E. William Lee is the defending champion. Mrs. Vance Oathout. chairman of women’s golf activities, is in charge. Mrs. William Hutchinson is secretary of the committee. The committee on prizes is Mrs. Robert Craig and Mrs. E. William Lee; the handicap committee is Mrs. Roy Van Horn, Mrs. Earl Hervey and Mrs. Glenn Howe. Mrs. Herman Sielken is chairman of rules. Besides the diamond pin which is presented to the winner to keep as long as she holds the championship, a pair of silver book ends will be awarded the champion. There also will be a number of other prizes. Including consolation awards and prizes for putting contests and the flights. Saturday night at the clubhouse there will be a cabaret dinnerbridge for members and guests. The entertainment will be by “the Dixie Baritone,” radio performer, who will sing during the dinner hour. The committee in charge is Mr. and Mrs. Chic Taylor, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. William Higburg and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coval. Dinner reservations are to be made by Friday night. Reservations are not necessary for bridge. Hostess to Club Miss Katherine Hedrick. 3678 North Delaware street, will be hostess tonight for a meeting of the Thesi Club.

then bid four clubs and South went to five clubs. North made a bold bid of six clubs, although he had command of only one suit. It is true that his partner had bid two suits, but he had not shown ab-i solute command of them with his minimum type of bidding. The Plav The play was unusually interesting. East opened the jack of hearts and declarer went right up with dummy’s ace to try to cause another heart lead. A small club was led and won by West with the ace. West now made the mistake of returning a club. He should have led a spade. But when the club was returned, declarer won with the queen and then took two more rounds of clubs. East and West then both discarded spades and declarer discarded two diamonds from dummy. The king of hearts next was played. followed by three more rounds of clubs. East discarded three diamonds, declarer discarded a spade and two diamonds from dummy, whie West discarded a damond, a spade and a heart. North now had the ace and eight of spades and the queen and four of diamonds. East held the king and jack of spades and the ten and nine of hearts. Dummy held the seven of spades, the queen and four of hearts and the ace of diamonds. West held the queen and ten of spades and the kind and five of diamonds. The declarer led the four of diamonds. East could not let go of a heart, or dummy’s two hearts would be good, so he discarded a spade. Dummy won the trick with the ace. The queen of hearts was played from dummy and now West -was squeezed. If he dropped a spade, declarer's two spades would be good, while when he discarded the king of diamonds the declarer discarded the eight of spades and took the last two tricks with the ace of spades and the* queen of diamonds. A spade lea dby East or a spade return by West would have prevented- the triple squeeze.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(From Shoecraft, New York) lyolene lizard (1), a wnne suede pump with leather stitching to match (2), and a green felt and kid oxford (3), will help you walk the right path to shoe beauty.

for a long time, and increases its own attractiveness in the process. Sabots, which have wide straps running right down to the sole of the shoes, are another popular type. Other shoes which will step out this fall include one-eyelet and two-eyelet models, which are really like high-cut opera pumps; oxfords; T-strap sandals for afternoon and evening; and the already accepted popular opera pump. All toes are fuller. Decidedly

MAN Ntltf‘^MORALS ByjANt JokdAn xpj

If you think your problem is unique, write to. Jane Jordan, who will help to turn your thoughts from your own troubles to other interests. T HAVE a letter from a young lady in a. highly sensitive frame of mind, who does not want her letter published. Her case is representative of a larger group of people than she realizes. Since the answer may be helpful to others, I want to share it with the readers of this column. She has a nose which spoils her looks because it is too large and inclined to redness. This physical handicap has preyed on her mind until her health is affected. Normally, she is an ambitious girl, but life has lost its savor. She is losing her interest in work as well as in society. * She is so morose that sometimes she fears her mind will become affected, too. She feels that there is not another girl in the world so afflicted. Let no one underestimate this problem. Nothing affects a woman so profoundly as a menace to her beauty. This young lady feels that she rather would be heartbroken over a love affair than to have a problem like this. That is an understandable reaction. The great fear back of every victim of a physical disfigurement is that he or she never will have a love affair. Any woman will agree that it is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. tt tt tt FIRST, there always is the possibility that something can be done to correct the condition. If the young lady will go to work and save her money, it is entirely possible that one of this country's great plastic surgeons can remake her nose. Everybody knows what marvelous work was done during the war in rebuilding features destroyed in battle. I advise her to see one of the eminent skin specialists in Indianapolis, who will tell her whether there is hope. If nothing can be done, then she must face her problem as courageously as do the blind, the deaf, or any of the army of physically handicapped people who have managed to make life worth while by developing compensatory talents to restore their self-esteem. J. P. Morgan, tme of the greatest powers the financial world ever knew, had a hideous nose. Women fainted and strong men quailed when they beheld this bulbous monstrosity on a human face. However this flurry isn’t a patch on what republics, banks, and big business

r* ; ■ 1 ; j Daily Recipe STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS j. j 6 good-sized green pep- j j pers I ! 1 cup pork sausage j = 4 tablespoons chop ped j j mushrooms j j 1 cup cooked rice ( j Salt ! Pepper ! ! * | | Cut a slice from the stem { = end of each pepper, remove j I seeds and parboil peppers 5 ! j minutes, sprinkle with salt j j and fill with mixture of pork i ! sausage, chopped mushrooms j j and rice, which has been sea- I j soned with salt and pepper. j j Cover with bread crumbs { | and bake 10 to 15 minutes in | • a moderately hot oven (400 ! j degrees F.. Serve on platter ) j decorated with parsley. j

round-toed models are coming into their own. Heels are medium height and quite straight for street wear, growing progressively higher and more curved for afternoon and evening. The famous shoe that won a cinder maid a prince wouldn’t have a chance against the autumn display. As for allurements—any maid should find a pair of slippers that will help her to keep in step with the Leap Year spirit.

did when Morgan lifted his voice and spoke! It is a classic example of the powerlessness of a physical handicap fought by an indomitable character. tt n n FANNY BRICE, a popular actress, had a large ugly nose. Because of her profession, she had it rebuilt into a nice, straight, respectable feature, whereupon her husband, Nicky Arnstein, promptly divorced her. He liked the Old nose best and felt as if somebody had changed wives on him. The case had wide newspaper publicity. Let me tell you the story of the French play, “Cyrano De Bergerac.’’ Cyrano and Christian were in love with Roxane. Cyrano never dared to make love to Roxane, because he had such a hideous nose he feared she would make fun of him. Christian, on the other hand, who was more presentable, never made love to her, because he lacked the wit and the gift of self-expression. Cyrano, believing that his only chance to adore the beloved was through Christian, offered to coach him so that the two could make one lover. Cyrano wrote all of Christian’s love letters and taught him all his speaches. Roxane fell in love with the spirit of Cyrano, believing that it resided in the body of Christian. Christian, realizing that it was Cyrano whom she really loved and not himself, lacked the courage to | tell her the truth. Christian was killed before the wedding and Roxane entered a convent. a a a EVERY Friday Cyrano visited her to bring news from the village. It was ten years before Roxane recognized him as the man with whom she had failed in love. The recognition came only a little while be- | fore Cyranos death. Therefore, Cyrano never won the girl he might have had if only he \ had not been so firmly convinced j that no woman could love a man with that nose! Someone has said that homely j women always are happily married because they are loved for something inside themselves and not the shell that houses it. After this young lady has exhausted the pos- i sibilities for facial reconstruction, j she must turn her thoughts firmly from noses to souls. She must spend time in developing the wit. the grace and the capacity for love of a Cyrano, without his mistaken sensitivity. She has said that not another girl in the world suffers from her problem. Will all the other girls who struggle with physical handicaps write to her and tell her wiiat attitude toward life has resulted from their trouble? The best letters will be published in this column. mrsTmarsella Is FETED AT SHOWER Mrs. Ida Marsella and Mrs. Anna Tosta entertained with a suurprise oridal shower Saturday night at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marsella, 5501 Broadway, in honor of Mrs. Nick Marsella, who was Miss Margaret Harmon before her marriage on April 23. The guests included: Messrs, and Mesdames Ben A. Branson, Patsie Gammieri. Robert Liese, Ivan Harmon, Marion Ernest Harmon. Mike Mannella. Jack Marsella. Dominic Tosta, Angel Stone, Roscoe Morton. Angelo Donofrio. Frank Miglians, Walter Harmon. Jessie Biddle. Frank Marsella and Lawrence Denzio: Mesdames Amaiziato Mastropaolo. Alice Morton; the Misses Antoinette Marsella. Moscelvn Morton. Clara Mastropoalo. Angeline Donofrio. Charlotte Hubbard. Patricia Moore. Teresa Marsella. Lena Mastropoalo, Rose Mastropoalo. . Mary Carosella, Ruth Manifold. Frances Dugan. Icfe Morton Margaret Goetz; and Messrs William Sherer. Felix Masi.roDoalo. Ross Bennett. James Harmon and Lloyd Biddle. Mcnriage Announced Announcement of the marriage of Miss Ollie Aileen Lewis to J. Ralph Noble, has been made by her parents, Mr. and Mi’s. Charles Lew r is, 518 East Thirty-fourth street. The wedding took place April 16 at the North Methodist Episcopal church, with the .Rev. W. W. Wiant officiating, u

Miss Hottel Betrothed to W. W. Perrin Mr. and Mrs. Milton B. Hottel. 25 West Forty-ninth street, have announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Kathleen Hottel, to William Weaver Perrin, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Perrin of Lafayette. The wedding will take place in September. Mrs. Louis W. Hottel. aunt of the bride-elect, will entertain with a bridge party tonight at her home. Sherman avenue at Carson road, for Miss Hottel. The guests will be: Mesdames Milton B. Hottel. Hovt C. Hottel. Lee Hottel. Russell Hottel. H T. Hottel. Thomas A Carroll. Frank Langsenkamp Jr.. Robert Armer, Chester Ridge. J D. Sparks. Lou Hudson E. E Whitehill. Raiph Busch. Qarth Marine. Elmer Jose. Charles Price. Rbbert Nelson. Donald Delbrook and the Misses Margaret Holdaway, Elizabeth Hudson. Fave Wendllr.g Marcelle Sadlier. Vivian Delbrook Margaret and Hilda Lou Carroll and Helen Persise of Salem. Miss Hottel attended Butler university where she belongs to Pi Beta Phi sorority. Mr. Perrin is a graduate of Indiana university and member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Miss Fisse Is Bride of A. S. Wehrel Miss Florence Ann Fisse, daughter of Mrs. Josephine Fisse became the bride of Albert S. Wehrel at 9 this morning in a ceremony at St. Philip Neri church. The Rev. Raymond R. Noll said the mass and the wedding ceremony, the altar being arranged with palms, ferns and summer flowers. Preceding the ceremony. Miss Mary Helen Brooks, organist, and Miss Ann Krienbaum, cousin of the bride, violinist, played a group of bridal airs. The “Ave Maria’N was played during the ceremony. The bride, given in marriage by her brother. Anthony Fisse, wore a gown of eggshell satin, fashioned on princess lines with lace yoke and long tight sleeves puffed at the elbows. Her veil of tulle fell over the face. She carried a white moire prayer book, tied with a shower of baby breath and gardenias. The attendants, Miss Esther Doty, bridesmaid, and Miss Anne Healy, maid of honor, wore dresses fashioned alike. Miss Doty’s was blue crepe worn with pink accessories and carried a shower bouquet of supreme roses. Miss Healy wore pink with blue accessories. Her flowers were Briarcliffe roses. Frank Wehrel, brother of the bridegrooom. was best man. Ushers were Howard Birsch and Leonard Wehrel, another brother. Following the ceremony a breakfast ivas held at the Arlington inn for members of the bridal party and the immediate families. They left on a trip to Detroit, Canada and Cleveland, the bride traveling in a black and white ensemble. They will be at home after Sept. 1 at 3320 East Vermont street.

Miss Dorothy Marie Ruehl Will Wed Kenneth G. Swengel Tonight

In a candlelight ceremony at 8 tonight at the Zion Evangelical church, Miss Dorothy Marie Ruehl will become the bride of Kenneth G. Swengel. The Rev. F. R. Daries will officiate. The altar will be banked with ferns, palms and standard baskets of gladioli and roses, mixed with summer flowers. Preceding the ceremony. Miss City Girl Will Be Married to Pastor Tonight Marriage of Miss Dorothy McCormack, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McCormack, 1217 Evison street, to the Rev. Arthur H. Abplanalp son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Abplanalp, Osgood, will be solemnized at 6:30 tonight at St. Mark’s English Lutheran church. The Rev. R. H. Benting will read the ceremony before the altar, .which will be decorated with baskets of gladioli. Mrs. Ovid H. Dunn, organist, will play a program of bridal music. The bride will wear a gown of light blue crepe, fashioned with long flared skirt, and a cape, trimmed with marabou. Her velvet turban and slippers will be blue, and she will carry a shower bouquet of pink roses. Her sister, Miss Mildred McCormack, will be her only attendant. She will wear pink crepe, with blue velvet turban and slippers, and will carry pink roses and delphinium. Mrs. McCormack will wear printed crepe with white accessories. Ira Abplanalp, Kokomo, will be best man for his brother. A reception at the church will follow the ceremony, after which the bridal couple will leave for a short wedding trip. They will be at home after Sept. 1 at 4132 Sutherland avenue. The bridegroom is a graduate of Wittenburg college,' PAST MATRON GOES TO LODGE PARLEY Mrs Beatrice M. Trusler, past matron of the Brightwood chapter, 399. Order of the Eastern Star, has gone to Baltimore, to attend the supreme council of Job's Daughters. Mrs. Trusler is grand guardian of Job's Daughters in Indiana. She was accompanied by Mrs. Mae Marcum Jacobs, past supreme guardian, and Mrs. Edna E. Fauley, supreme marshal. % DR. AND MRS. PAYNE GUESTS AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Smith, 3802 North Emerson avenue, entertained Saturday night at the Columbia club with a dinner parly, honoring Dr. and Mrs. John Howard Payne. The dinner party followed the reception given by Dr. Payne’s mother, ; Mrs. Katherine C. Payne, in honor i of her son and his wife, the former I Miss Eileen C. Roberts of Niagara Falls. Out-of-town guests at the dinner I were Miss Wilma Frey of Ft. Wayne and Lawson Smith of Battle Creek, Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Paine left Sunday morning for San Francisco. They will sail Aug. 86 for Honolulu

What’s in Fashion?

‘Hour-Glass’ Silhouette for Fall

Directed. By AMOS PARRISH-

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NEW YORK, Aug, 23—“ High, wide and handsome!” That's the way you're going to look this fall—if you follow fashion. Wide in the shoulders. High in the waistline. And very handsomely slim and straight in the skirt. When you see yourself in one of the new dresses, you're going to think. "Hm. The old ‘hour-glass’ silhouette." And it is, a little. Not enough of tfle old 1890 hour-glass figure, though, to make you worry about stiff boned corsets and nineteeninch waists. “It’s an hour-glass only through the top of the figure. Wide across the shoulders . . . slanting down through a smoothly moulded bodice to a higher, nipped-in waistline . . . with skirts smooth over the hips to outline their curves. (You can see the shapes in the illustration.) It’s a feminine, natural silhouette, following the lines of most feminine figures. Therefore, easy to wear. To be sure, fashion slightly ex-

Marie Schakel will sing “Ah Sweet Mystery of Life,” “O Promise Me” and “I Love You Truly.” The bride, to bs given in marriage by her father, William E. Ruehl, will wear a white satin gown, fashioned with tight bodice and long sleeves. Sweet peas and gardenias will be roped at the side. The tulle veil will be edged wth Italian lace, the cape being embroidered with seed pearls. She will carry a shower bouquet of white roses and baby breath, tied with a taffeta bow and streamers. The maid-of-honor, Miss Margaret Swengel, will wear a blue taffeta dress, designed with tight bodice and ruffled skirt. Her accessories will be blue and she will carry a shower bouquet of Talisman roses and baby breath. Bridesmaids Are Chosen The bridesmaids will be the Misses May Louise Roesener, Mary Louise Cooperider and Mary Lammert. Miss Roesener’s dress will be peach net, embroidered with peach taffeta flowers and designed with peach taffeta yoke. Miss Cooperider will wear pink, designed with alternating rows of net and taffeta. A pink taffeta jacket will complete the ensemble. Miss Lammert’s gown will be green net over taffeta. The v-neck-line at the back will be bordered with rosettes. The bridesmaids all will carry shower bouquets of old rose colored roses, tied with ribbon to match their dresses. The flower girls will be Phyllis Price and Norma Jo Cooperider. Both will wear ruffled taffeta dresses of green and pink, respectively. They will carry baskets of rose petals, tied with ribbons and ferns. A reception at the home of the bride’s parents will follow. The rainbow shades carried out in the bridal dresses will be used in the decorations. The serving table laid with- a lace cloth will be centered with a threetiered wedding cake in white. Pink tapers will be placed at each end of the table. Wedding Trip to Lake Assisting Mr. and Mrs. Ruehl will be the bride’s grandmother, Mrs. Henry Ruhl of Wabash. Other honor guests at the reception will be Mrs. Anna Swengel and Mrs. Nellie Fish of Chicago, aunt and grandmother of the bridegroom; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ruhl of Wabash, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lammert Sr., grandparents of the bride. The couple will leave on a wedding trip to Freeman lake, the bride traveling in a black and white ensemble. They will be at home at 1307 North Beville avenue

Caticura Soap and Catlenra Ointment are world favorite* because so effective in restoring the natural purity and beauty of the skin, scalp, hair and hands when marred by unsightly conditions. # Sonp 2Se. Ointment JS n4 @ticur<i

.AUG. 23. 1032

AMOS PARRISH ‘ INDIANAPOLIS TIMES' N. Y. FASHION BUREAU. 500 FIFTH AVE. N. Y. Please send your free bulletin on Correct Skirt Lengths for Every Occasion. I Inclose stamped, addressed return envelope. \ NAME STREET CITY STATE aggerates the natural width of the shoulders (and that makes waists look narrower in contrast—with wide fur collars on coats, with wide armholes and yokes and dropped shoulders, and with sleeves wide through the top. But for the rest of your figure, it’s left to its own natural .devices—or rather, to its well (but not uncomforably) corseted devices. Os course, modern skirts aren't so long as those of the original hour-glass figure. Some of them, though, are longer than they’ve been of late. If you'd like the correct skirt lengths for every time and occasion of the day—with sketches illustrating them —send the coupon for the free bulletin. Copyright, 1932, by Amos Parrish Next: Silks that look like wools smart for fall. Miss Fife Will Be Honored at Kitchen Shower Mrs. Edwin H. Gable will entertain tonight at her home, 1508 Broadway, with a bridge party and green kitchen shower in honor of Miss Dorothy Fife, who will be married Sept. 1 to J. Franklin Ries, Chicago. Pink and blue will predominate in the decorations and appointments. Guests with Miss Fife and her mother, Mrs. George W. Fife, will be the bridegroom-elect’s mother, Mrs. J. g. Ries, and: Mesdames Denver Fuller. John Sloan Smith, W. Dale Evans, R I. Bover. A. L. Johnson, Russell Clift Phillip Miller. Harold Magree. William Walker. Bru—ton. Misses Clara Foxworttay, Mary Allc* Smith and Gladys Hooker. House Party Ended Twenty-four members of Job's Daughters, Bethel 9, have returned from a house party at Lake Wawasee. Chaperons were Mesdames Ella Couts, Joseph Alexander, A. G, Fry and J. A. Knez'oer.

MIDDLE AGE HAS NO TERRORS NOW Woman Finds Relief After Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound

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“I am now forty-six and passing through the Change. I was a terrible sufferer from headaches and giddy spells which lasted two days at a time. I felt as if I had an iron hat on mv head. I tried several medicines hut felt no better. Then I. tried Lydia E. Pinkham’s \ egetable Compound and oh joy! the headaches and the hot flushes are gone. You may publish this letter. I hope it will help someone else to use your wonderful medicine.”— Mrs. Stewart Fooees, Palace Apts., Mineola, L. 1., New York. Ask your druggist for the fhblet form. Convenient and dependable.