Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 91, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1932 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Miss Kinney to Be Guest at Shower Miss Mary Esther Kinney, whose marriage to Robert Howard Patterson will take place Sept. 21, will be honored at a bridge party and linen shower to be given tonight by Mrs. Albert Collyear, 141 South BelShirley Lake park, Twentieth street The appointments and decorations will be in shades of pink and b’ue. Guests with bride-elect will include her mother, Mrs. David JKinney, and: Mrs. Nelli* Patterson, mother oI the bridegroom-elect, and Mesdames Herbert H Ryker, John Henry Kinney. Andrew Johnson, J. M Miller, Martha Scheflel, Bcsgle Pontius. Paul H Pontius. Charles L. Hudson, Albert Radtke, Edward Good, Kenneth Swlck. Harry Thompson. Albert Svendsen, Frank Royl, Ben StefT.v. Edna Caldwell, Alvin J. Caldwell, and Nora Weakly of Shelbyvllle and the Misses Marian and Ethel Miller, Clara Pontius, Grace Johnson, Jane and Anne GUgour, Ruth Patterson. Marybelle Kinney and Lola Huston. Miss Marian Miller will be hostess at. a tea for Miss Kinney Monday at her home. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David J. Kinney, Shirley Lake park, Twentieth street and Shadeland drive. Mr. Pattern is the son of Mrs. Nellie Patterson.
Kathryn Gibson Is. Married to Dr. E. B. Boots Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gibson of the Ambassador apartments, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Kathryn Gibson, to Dr. Edwin B. Boots , son of Mrs. Ann L, Boots of Terre Haute. The v'edding took place July 23 at Gary. They left today to make their home at Hobart. Mrs. Boots was honored at a bridge party and miscellaneous shower, given Tuesday night by the Misses Ruth Pectol, Allean Saylor and Dorothy Rainwater. Guests with Mrs. Boots and Mrs. Gibson were Mesdames Frank Monyhan, Homer Marks. Cora Richardson, Raymond Weltz, Kreish Miles, Merrill Waltman, Ralph Blair, Marvin Elkins, Alvan Whittaker. Harold List, John Hawkins, Elmer Roney and the Misses Lelia Petrie, Martha Dorman, Marjorie and Barbara Duncan, Julia Faucett, Verna Alcorn, Grace and Ann Shank, Esther Cossel, Mary Whetstine and Bessa Steele. Mrs. Alice Kent gave a party for the bride Monday night.
NEWS OF SOCIETY FOLK
Mr. and Mrs. Phil E. Rech and Miss Billy Leona Rech, 5002 University avenue, are cruising on the Great Lakes, aboard the SS. Tionesta. Dr. and Mrs. M. S. Harding of West Newton will spend this week at Lake Tippecanoe. Mr. and Mrs. John B. McArthur, 6041 Dewey avenue, will spend the week-end at Muncie as the guests of relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. Dwight Peterson and daughters, 4014 North New Jersey street, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolflin of Evansville at their summer camp near Newburg. Mr. and Mrs. George Reed have gone to Rushville for residence. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Stewart and daughters, 5108 College avenue, are spending a week at Lake Manitou. Miss Wilma Goldberg, 4327 Broadway, has as her house guest, her cousing, Miss Mildred Goldberg, Detroit. Mrs. Leo Netzorg and children, 3318 Carrollton avenue, have as their guest Miss Peggy Marx, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Marx, Muncie. Mrs. Emanuel Buckler, 906 Marion avenue, has returned home after a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Fullerton of Washington. Ind. Mrs. E. D. Taggart, 2503 Broadway, is home after a visit with Miss Betty Hull, daughter of Mrs. George H. Hull of Connersville. Miss Emma Dobbins, 6220 Carrollton avenue, w*hs the week-end guest of Miss Dorothy Deem of Greensburg. Miss Dolly Birk, 3235 North New Jersey street, who has been visiting in the east, will return Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Buttolph, 30 West Fall creek parkway. North drive, are at their summer home on Les Cheneaux islands. Mrs. H. H. Martin. 4526 Washington boulevard, will sail this week from New York for a six-month trip thr-ngh Europe. Miss Emma Claypool of the Marott will spend the remainder of the summer at her cottage at Harbor Point, Mich. She has been visiting her sister. Mrs. Winthrop Trowbridge in Bingham. Mass. Bishop and Mrs. Edgar Blake, formerly of Indianapolis, are visiting at Higgins Lake. Mich., before taking up residence at Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Dammeyer and Miss Alma Dammeyer, 4460 Broadway, are cruising on the Great Lakes aboard the S. S. Octorara. Miss E. Winifred Dunkle, 503 North Trcmont street, is at the Parkside hotel while visiting in New York. Miss Edith Ann Hoopingarner, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Hoopingarner, 7153 North Meridian street, will leave, Saturday, for the University of Kansas where she will enter her senior year. Mrs. Audrel T. Apple, 4261 Carrollton. and Miss Esther Jefferson will arrive this week from a trip to Yellowstone park and the northwest. Mrs. A. H. Steinbrecher of the Marott is visiting her son at Kenosha, Wis. Mrs. Lois Graham, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Graham. 1940 North Delaware street, left Wednesday for Bay View, Mich. Mrs. Gladys Dietz of the Marott and her daughter. Mrs. George Alexander of Chicago, are in New York. Mrs. Ricca Scott Titus, 1718 North New Jersey street, has as her guest Miss Ray Scott of New York, her sister. Miss Marthabel Bright is visiting Miss Helen Ruppel at Terre Haute. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Denny have returned from a vacation at Lake Wawaasee.
Wedding of Stage and Society
-4m * ♦ L " .AS 1 3
Members of the stage and social worlds looked on as Miss Frances Pemberton Dade, actress of New York, and Brock Van Every of Scafsdale. N. Y.. were married. Bride and groom are shown here after the church ceremony at Chestnut Mills, Pa.
i MAN Ntltf^MOlULS' fly By Jan£ JokpAn
YOUNG girls are invited to bring their problems to Jane Jordan, who will answer their questions in this column. Dear Jane Jordan —I am 16 and have a sister 18. I live in a community where there i* a party every Saturday night and I am limited every time. During the last two years I have gone only twice. My father does not want me to go by myself and does not want me to go with the boys. Every boy I go with is all right until I go with him, or my parents think I am gqing to Then he is very ‘low down"' and not fit for any girl to go with. They do not like for us to dance, go swimming, go to shows, play party games, or play cards Now will you please tell me what there is left to do? Do you think I should stay home and not go anywhere, like X do? My sister never goes any more than I do. This summer she went some, but there wasn’t any peace in the family while she was goipg. My father quarrels with us for staying at home so much, but when we go he quarrels about the money it takes, or finds some other fault with our going. What can we do to enioy home life? Should we go on like this and not enjoy youth, or what should we do? AN OUTSIDIV. Dear Outsider—No one is more helpless than a young girl under the domination of spiritually blind parents. There is nothing she can do about it except wait until she can stand on her own feet, economically, and then escape. Duty of the parent to the child incompasses far more than housing, feeding and clothing the child. Preparation of the young for life outside the family group never
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Munday, Cold Springs road, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stevens, Thirty-eighth and Illinois streets, have gone to Detroit and Canada. Mrs. A. W. Early and her granddaughter, Gloria Miller of Pasadena, Cal., are at the Edgewater Beach in Chicago for the remainder of the summer. Mrs, J. E. Thompson of the Marott is visiting in Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Price of Tampa, Fla., who are the guests, of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Aikman, Cold Spring road, have returned from San Francisco where they attended the Shrine convention. Mrs. D. M. Isgrigg and Miss Mary Croanan of the Marott w r ill return early in September from a vacation in Maine. Miss Bessie C. Morgan, 3435 North Pennsylvania street, has returned from a trip to Nova Scotia. She has as her guest. Miss Eleanor Fisher of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Hebert of Lamar, Colo., are visiting Mr. Hebert's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Octave Hebert, 1802 Orleans street. Mrs. Hebert, formerly „Miss Josephine O'Neil, has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd O'Neil of Logansport.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Rahe of Boston are the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Swope, 5767 Central avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Fisher and children of Golden Hill have returned from a trip to Atlantic City. Miss Helen Louise Langston, 101 West Hampton drive, has returned from Madison, Wis.. where she attended the summer session of the University of Wisconsin, and a trip to the east. §he will enter her senior year at Northwestern university this fali. Mrs. Samuel Shuman and daughter, Estelle, New York, are here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rubin, 824 Union street. Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Ott, 1019 North Bancroft street, are taking a motor trip, visiting in Chicago. Milwaukee and other cities in the lake region. Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Maschmeyer, 226 West Thirty-first street, j have as their house guest, Mrs. Maschmeyer’s sister, Mrs. Garfield Grant Greer. Clearwater. Fla., formerly of Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Peyton and children, Los Angeles, are the guests of her sister. Miss Bessie Nelson. 2834 North Capitol avenue, and other relatives in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Thacker. 2448 Pierson avenue, are visiting in La Grange. Mrs. Emma Holstein and daughter Mary, 123 East Thirty-third j street, have returned from a twomonths’ tour through the west. Mrs. Howard Fox, 1405 College l avenue, has as her guests Mrs. Robert McCullah and Miss Grace Rush i of Bloomington. William Bertermann. 5881 Washington boulevard, is visiting at Bloomington. Mrs. Frederick I. Barrows. Mrs. Arthur Dixon and Mrs. Hugh Vest attended a party at Connersville. given Thursday by Miss Marion W Barrows for Miss Rachel Burke Hull, bride-elect. Mr. and Mrs. John Hartong, 43 East Fifty-second street, have returned frem Cincinnati, where they spent some time at the NetherlandPlaza hotel. Miss Betty Hartong 1 has returned from Culver, where she attended the summer school commencement exercises. Alpha Gamvias to Meet * Alpha Gamma sorority will meet I at 7:30 tonight at the Seville, Taveffu '
seems to enter the head of the oldfashioned parent, whose instinct is to guard the girl at all cost. When the cost is the loss of the girl, the parent feels aggrieved and never blames himself for the break. The sad part of the whole thing is that your parents have only your welfare at heart. They wish to protect you from premature encounters with experience. They do not realize that overp: otection only makes the young more avi dto learn what it is they need protection frem. Girls kept away frem boys are more curious about the relations of the sexes than those who enjoy wholesome companionship with boys from babyhood up. “An Outsider"—the very way you sign yourself show's that a wrong attitude toward life has resulted from your isolation. If there is one thing a human being longs for more than another it is to “belong." It is essential to our happiness that we have a recognized place in the life about us. Every one suffers from a painful feeling of futility unless she is accepted as important by the persons in her environment. However, you can't teach your parents when .they so firmly believe that their place is to teach you. All you can do is to wait and work for deliverance. o n Dear Jane Jordan—l am in a love tangle. I love a bov who does not love me non. He said X like you as a sneetheart and that’s all now, but later 1 mav learn to love you.” I do not go with him, but with another boy, who wants me to marry him. He says we will go to a ranch in Montana and I soon would forget my love for this other boy. and love him. My mother says, “You have your own life to live.’’ Sjie likes both hoys and would like either for a son-in-law. What shall I do? Wait and see if this other boy ever loves me, or marry the one who wants me and go west? PUZZLED. Dear Puzzled—lt is not necessary for you to do either. I certainly should not sit around and twaddle my thumbs waiting for a young man to fall in love with me. Neither should I marry one I did not love and isolate myself on a ranch in Montana. If you were old, dying to get married, and unlikely to get another chance, I might advise you differently. The young can afford to wait. 8 8 8 Dear Jane Jordan—l have been going with a boy for about four months and he never has kissed me, and has put his arm around me only on four occasions. He tells me he rather would be with me than with any other girl and I believe hipi- . We have great fun discussing books, plavs. and life. He is an up-to-date college boy studying for the ministry. I am an up-to-date girl and considered very beautiful. We both enjoy tennis, swimming, dancing, and bridge. The thing that puzzles me is the attitude this boy is taking toward me. I can not understand him. I find I have become quite fond of him. What altitude shall I take? Dear College Girl—Follow his lead. He probably has scruples against petting unless he is engaged. It is unusual to find a girl complaining because a boy pets too little. Most of them complain because they pet too much.
HIGHLAND JUNIORS WILL HOLD DANCE
Junior members of Highland Golf and Country Club will be entertained at a junior sport dance Saturday night at the clubhouse. William Wright Jr. is chairman of the committed in charge. He is being assisted by Miss Mary Margaret Ruddle, Keith Ruddle, Ralph and Wayne Burns, Miss Dorothy Martenet and Ward Fenstermaker. Members will be privileged to invite guests. The club swimming pool will be open for those who prefer swimming to dancing. Chapters to Meet Miss Ruth Griffith will be hostess for a meeting of the Alpha and Beta chapters of Rho Delta sorority tonight at her home, 1303 North La Salle street. Plans will be made for a membership dinner dance at Whispering Winds. Ehgagement Announced Announcement has been made by Mr. and Mrs. Kendrick E. Kenny, Peru, of the engagement of their daughter, Carolyn, to Charles Sparks. Franklin. The wedding will take place Oct, 19 in Peru. Miss Kenny attended Franklin college, and is a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
A Day’s Menu Freak fast — Sugared cherries, cereal, cream, waffles, milk, coffee. Lio'chcon — Sardines and asparagus in easy Hollnrdaise sauce on toast, frozen fruit salad. toasted crackers, milk, iced tea. Freak fast — Cold sliced corned beef, potatoes au gratin. jellied cabbage-ce'ery and pepper salad, filled cup cakes, milk, coffee.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Highland Golf Star Is Winner at Ulen Meet Mrs. C. A. Jaqua of Highland Golf and Country Club won lowgross honors in the invitational golf tournament at Ulen Country Club in Lebanon Tuesday with a score of 89. Two other Indianapolis women, Mrs. Jei’ome Meyer and Mrs. Sam Goldstein, both of Broadmoor Country Club, won second and third places with scores of 92 and 93, l-espectively. Mrs. Monte Munn of Highland and Mrs. George Weaver of Meridian Hills Country Club tied for low net honors with scores of 79. while Mrs. E. P. Dean of the Country Club of Indianapolis and Mrs. J. C. Andrews of Crawfordsville tied for the putting pi’ize. Eighty golfers played in the tourney and attended the luncheon following.
Patterns PATTERN ORDER BLANK Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- *770 tern No. i ( & Size Street ...■ ............. City State Name
A SLIP THAT IS MORE THAN A SLIP
Still another new and lovely lingerie design that Paris has sent us. It is easy to slip into —you are all ready to put on your dress. It takes very little time and material to make it. A dainty effect can be obtained by trimming the brassiere bodice and hem with lace. Crepe silk and satin are lovely mediums. Style No. 772 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38. 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 16 .requires 3% yards 39-inch. Our Summer Fashion Magazine will help you economize. Price, 10 cents. Price of PATTERN 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
BRING THIS COUPON $1.50 ; COMPLETE PERMANENT WAVE fVfr.v day In (he week and on Monday, Wednesday and Friday Mahtw. CKNTKkL BrUTT COLLEGE 2nd Floor Odd Fellow Bid*. Ltf*ln l4.rj Monday Is Free Flnirer Wave Oay
Mrs. Shafer Hostess to Brides-Elect Mrs. William J. Shafer. 2901 North Meridian street, entertained today at the Propylaeum with a luncheon in honor of Miss Sarah Margaret Moore, Miss Louise Sherwood, and Miss Anne Speers, all brides-elect. Miss Moore's marriage to Fletcher Hodges Jr. will take place Sept. 10; Miss Sherwood will marry Gustav W. Klumpp. Boston, Sept. 1,. and Miss Speers will become the bride of Greer Shotwell in October. Covers were laid today for the guests of honor, Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, Mrs. Henry A. O. Speers, Mrs. Fletcher Hodges, Mrs. Geoffry Johnston and Miss Madelaine Speers. The table was decorated with summer flowers. Miss Moore will be honored at a luncheon to be given Monday, Sept. 5. at the Propylaeum by her fiance's sisters, Mrs. Jesse J. Garrison and Miss Ruth Clifford Hodges. John Fletcher will entertain for Miss Moore, Mr. Hodges and members of their w’edding party, the night of Sept. 5. Miss Sherwood will be honored by Miss Helen Coffey at a bridge party Tuesday, a bridge party Friday given by Mrs. Francis Meyer, and a party Monday for which Miss Helen Rogers will be the hostess.
MISS BAKER SETS WEDDING DATE
Miss Mary Janet Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mi’s. Clarence W. Baker, 31 North Denny street, has chosen Sept. 3 as the date for her wedding to Henry A. Baker, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Baker, Arthur, 111. The ceremony will take place in Chicago, and there will be no attendants. After their marriage the couple plans to reside in Terre Haute.
Hoosier Club to Hold Last Roof Garden Dance Otto Roos, chairman of the entertainment committee for the Hoosier Athletic Club, announces that the last roof garden dance of the season for members and guests will be held Saturday night at the clubhouse. The committee in charge of the dance is: Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Dfhner. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Masten, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Hatton, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Ochs. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wiebkr Urban Renner, and Jack Helmerick. The newly decorated ballroom will be opened for the first dance of the fall and winter season Saturday, Sept. 17. DINNER PARTY WILL BE GIVEN Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Weinburg, 1 West Twenty-eighth street, will entertain with a dinner party tonight for Mr. and Mrs. Julius Goodman of Christiansburg, Va., house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Efroymson, 5360 Central avenue, at Hollyhock •Hill, Eighty-first street and College avenue. Other guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Ray Levy. RECEPTION TONIGHT FOR PASTOR, WIFE The Rev. George Kimsey. pastor of the Memorial Baptist church, and Mrs. Kimsey, will be honored at a reception to be given tonight by the church members at the church, St. Clair street and Belle Vieu place. The program will include talks by representatives of each of the church departments: music by the church orchestra under the direction of Mike Fres; a reading by Mrs. Fred Voyles, and a violin solo by Robert Patrick. Theater Board to Meet Board of directors of the Children's Theater of the Civic Theater will meet at 2:30 Tuesday at the •home of Miss Rosamond Van Camp, 4801 Michigan road.
So Crisp! So Delicious! because Puffed Wheat and Rice are SHOT FROM GUNS (J f * g ive unique flavor, crispYou want ready-to-serve Sm cereal to be extra crisp and ® delicious, yet nourishing as well. That’s what shooting grains from guns does for ing. A dish of Puffed Grains Puffed Wheat and Puffed with milk and sugar brings Rice. It breaks open every not only unusual delicioussinglefoodcell.Makesevery ness, but equals the food particle not only twice as energy of a baked potato or crisp... but richly nourish- a lamb chop! Try them. Now “Twice-Crisped”l Puffed Wheat-Puffed Rice
Shoes Sensible and Stylish EVEN the most sturdy shoes this fall manage to get away from that obvious look of comfort at all costs and to the dickers with style. Heels of the sensible sort that doctors delight to recommend are attached to the smartest lasts, decorated with dressmaker touches of intricate stitching, tricky pipings and adroitly placed buttons, not at all in the tradition of the old-fashioned boot,
&BL fK
Blue kid trimmed in red.
mating materials at present, combinations of them being especially smart. In addition to the classic black and brown, greens, wines, and blues are finding a place on the fall shoe color card, and the sombre black shoe is as often as not lightened with touches of brightcolored leathers in the form of pipings or lacings that simulate the breezy perforated models of the summer.
Marriage of Helen Price Is Announced The marriage of Miss Helen Jane Price to Charles J. Bamford Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bamford of Trenton. N J., at the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church in the spring, was announced at a dinnerbridge given by the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Edward Price, Wednesday night at their home. 438 East Fall Creek boulevard, north drive. Decorations of pink and blue w'ere used. Covers were laid for Mrs. Bamford, Mrs. Price and Mesdames A. A. Gumfory. C. D. Owens, J. H. Williams, and the Misses Leonette Blue, Glendale Burton, Dorothy Hamilton, Florence Hunt, Thelma Griffin, Dortha Thompson. Dana and Maxine Williams, and Dorotha Caton of Terre Haute. Miss Caton, attendant at the wedding, and Miss Maxine Williams will entertain with showers for the bride. Dates have not been set. Mr. Bamford is a graduate of Lebanon Valleye college at Amnsville, Pa. They will live at the Fall Creek address.
CITY DELGATES TO TO FRAT PARLEY Wendell Rowe, 784 Middle Drive. Woodruff Place, and William Bartholomew. 3218 North Capitol avenue. members of the Franklin College chapter of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. have gone to Estes Park, Col., to atend the forty-first biennial convention of the fraternity. The meeting will open Aug. 29 and close Sept. 1. They left by motor on the southern route, accompanied by Patrick Cuddy, official delegate from Franklin college. They will return by the northern route. Features of the convention will be a rodeo, sightseeing trips, dances, banquets and business sessions. MISS ATKINS BRIDE OF OREN OTT INGE R Announcement of the marriage of Miss Sibylla Fern Atkins, daughter of Mr. and Irs. William J. Atkins, Whitestown, to Oren Fayne Ottinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ora Ottinger, Whitestown, has been made by the bride’s parents. The wedding took place Aug. 22. The bridegroom is a graduate of the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. The at-home announcement is for 2739 Barth avenue, Indianapolis. Mrs. Omar Williams, Indianapolis was a guest at the wedding. Honor Miss Courtney Miss Frances Courtney, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Courtney, 1737 North Meridian street, is the guest of Miss Marianne Cowan of Ft. Wayne. A series of parties have honored her and Miss Emily Louise Pearson of Columbus. 6. All were classmates at St. Mary-of-the-Woods. Plan Church Dinner Crooked Creek Baptist church w’ill sponsor a benefit dinner from 5 to 7:30 Friday night at the church. Mrs. Ira Isenhaur will be in charge.
but for decoration only. For street wear pumps and oxfords vie for favor, the former cut rather higher over the instep; the latter cut out |in the same place into all manner of open-( work designs.
Kid. calf, and suede are dom-
Black kid. white underlay.
PRESIDENT
Sir ; . v. tllllilSilv
Miss Bessie Blake
Miss Bessie Blake is the newlyelected president of the Alpha chapter. Theta Sigma Delta sorority. She succeeds Mrs. Joseph McHugh.
MISS THUEMLER TO BE CAMP DIRECTOR Miss Gertrude Thuemler, dean of girls at Arsenal Technical schools will be associate director of Camp Nagawicka next year, according to announcement following the close of camp recently. Miss Thuemler, who has been serving as director of activities of the camp, associated with the St. Johns military academy at Delafield, Wis., during the last eight weeks, has gone on a motor trip through northern Wisconsin and Michigan.
Your Opportunity to have a SINGER Sewing Machine at the Lowest Price in Years No doubt you have always wanted a Singer, but have waited until you could “afford” one. New low prices on all 1932 models for family use and new easy terms make it unnecessary longer to deny yourself the satisfaction of having the best. The perfect performance of a modern Singer makes sewing a pleasure and you can save its modest cost many times over. Clearance of Used Machines A large number of women took advantage of our clearance sale last week, but we still have a few machines used for a short time as floor samples, demonstrators and in our sewing schools. A few fortunate women can secure these exceptional values by prompt selection. These are in perfect operating condition and represent a double saving. New’ easy terms. Complete Home Sewing Course free with every machine. New Singer Vacuum Cleaners / now on display Rebuilt Vacuum Cleaners Included in this sale. SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO., INC. 126 W. Washington St. 24 Monument PI. 838 Virginia Ave. OPEN EVENINGS DURING THIS SALE
Restless and Could Not Sleep at Night. Healed by Cuticura. “I was troubled with pimples that affected my face. They were large, sore and very hard. Before the pimples came to a head they itched so bad that I scratched them, and when they broke I could hardly stand the burning feeling. Some of them festered and then scaled off. At night I was restless and could not sleep. “I began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in a short time I was completely healed after using one box of the Ointment and less than two cakes of the Soap." (Signed) Miss Mary Handy, R. R. 1, Okeana, Ohio. /lltlCUr* Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c. Talcum 25c.
-AtJG. 25, 1932
‘Big Sisters’ Will Aid in Registration A “big sister" advisory system win be established on the Butler university campus this year in an es. fort to lessen the difficulties of registration week. Twenty-six upperclasswomen have been chosen to act as advisors, under the direction of Miss Marv Bohnstadt, chairman of the Y. W. C. A. freshman advisory committee! Letters have been sent to all prospective first-year women welcoming them to Butler. Advisers will write to the four women allotted to them and will guide them during registration week when they will be entertained on S"pt. 12. at teas to be given at the homes of faculty members. On Sept. 13 the first Y. W. meeting will be held where members of the Women s Council and officers of the leading women’s organizations will be introduced. Those to assist are: The Misses Grace Barnett. Josephtns Bennett. Bernice Brown. Mary Alice Burch Mary Frances Cray. Dorothv Dunne- Mabel Espey. Dorothy Wright. Ardith Whitmire. Frances Wysong. Virginia Goodwin Elaine Schmidt. Marjorie Lvtle McComb, Vera Sudrock. Sara Eliwbeth Vfii.er. Betty Ann Nichols, Margaret Over, man. Marv Elizabeth Search. Mary Mar saret Str,elder. Dorothv Baldridgr R,„ h Mane Price Evelyn Crostreet. Geraldine Kuntz. Betty Dodds. Marjorie Carr. Marjorie Watkins. Madeline Sander. Mary Glick ’ Jul 'a Henderson. Josephine McElhaney, Margaret Ensley, Hope WiU cuUv Lo,,tsp Haworth. Martha Metcalf Magdalene Adams, Mary Helen Dunningl ton, Evelyn McDermit. Kathryn Atkinson. Emma Lou Thornborough. Margaret Mattingly, Charlotte Peple, Ann' Arnold Agnet Postma and Mrs. Julia Bowman I^edy. Hostess to Club Mrs. O. A. Collins, 527 North Denny street, will be hostess today to members of the Ladies' Federal Club. trai
Daily Recipe HAM SALAD 1 cup hakccl ham, diced 1 cup celery, cut in small pieces 1 green pepper Mayonnaise Lettuce Paprika Celery tips for garnishing Dice baked ham, celery and half of the green pepper and moisten with mayonnaise. Pile in a mound in the center of a lettuce cup. Cut the remaining half of the green pepper into shreds. Decorate the salad with shreds, paprika and celery tips.
