Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 112, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1932 — Page 7
SEPT. 19, 1932
What’s in Fashion?
New Details Decorate Coats Directed By AMOS PARRISH
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NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—‘Plastron. Opera cape. Epaulets. Collarettes. Encrusted furs.” Coat language—as that is—certainly has some new words in it. And every word stands for anew idea . . . something that makes the coat look out-of-the-ordinary, individual and very new. The coat with collarette of Persian, caracul or beaver is one of these. (It’s sketched.) One of the best, too, to buy-early in the fall. Why? Because the collarette is detachable. You wear it with dresses before you need a coat. Another quaint fashion is the coat with opera cape ... a cape collar that comes almost to the elbows with a black point that hangs clear to the waist. Flat Furs Used Flat furs for medium long-haired ones such as mink or kolinsky are used for these. Still a third cape coat looks even more different .. . the one with shawl collar of fox and a iabric cape edged with fox. (A better idea if you want a cape but don't want the extra warmth of an all-fur cape.) What’s meant by ‘plastron”? Just fur encrusted onto the front of the coat to look like a bib. These were favorites of the late ’9os and usually have small, flared standing collars. Sometimes fur is encrusted on to form a yoke . . . round or pointed. Or to go down over the shoulders like epaulets. It’s a fine way to warm up the chest. Here’s Individual Coat Certainly individual is the coat with whole top of caracul, Persian, lapin or beaver. And here's an idea. Some fur tops are separate. Then you have an extra, short fur jacket for early fall wear. Cape coats are smart ... if the cape is right length and type for your Our free bulletin . . . ‘•The Right' Cape Collar for Various Figures” . . . shows you in sketches what kind you should wear. Save yourself trouble by sending for it. (Copyright, 1932, by Amos Parrish) Next —Many practical ensembles all one color.
Puzzle Fans Find Scrambled Letter ‘Contest Real Tax on Their Wits
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Scrambled letters vied with scrambled eggs as a popular part of Indianapolis’ diet this morning, as hundreds of puzzle fans eagerly awaited the fourth test in The Times’ $125 contest. So here it is, staring you in the face, the big letter *‘D.” Competitors who thought the contest would be easy have found out their mistake, and many have spent an hour or more tryin gto fit together the fragment* of letters and past them up neatly.
AMOS PARRISH. THE INDIANAPOLIS' TIMES’ NEW YORK FASHION BUREAU. 500 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. Please send your frre bulletin on "The Right Cape Collar lor Various Figures. I inclose stamped, addressed return envelope. NAME STREET CITY STATE
LUNCHEON WILL BE GIVEN BY SOCIETY Martha Hawkins Society of the First Baptist church will have a covered dish luncheon Thursday at the home of Mrs. Charles Brigham, 25 Hampton drive. Mrs. Eugene C. Foster of the Indianapolis Foundation will speak on “The Place of the Volunteer Society in the Field of Social Service.” Members are requested to bring scraps of lace and silk to be ustfd in dressing dolls which will be sent to the Swatow Mission. CHURCH UNION TO OPEN YEAR'S WORK Women's Union of the Emerson Avenue Baptist church will hold its first meeting of the season at 11 Wednesday at the church. A business meeting will be followed by luncheon and a missionary meeting. “The Art of Working Together” will be the topic for discussion. Mrs. Asa Hoy, president, will preside. Hostesses will be members of the executive board. 30 GUESTS TO BE AT FAMILY PARTY Miss Clara L. Pontius, 2040 Ruckle street, will entertain thirty guests tonight at a family party. Honoring Miss Mary Esther Kinney and Robert Howard Patterson whose marriage will take place Wednesday.
Neatness will be the big factor in this contest. And it will take a high degree of accuracy to fit the scrambles exactly in their places. If you have missed the first three letters of the contest, you can enter today by calling the circulation department of The Times. Back numbers have been saved for you. Rules of the contest follow: The letters, cut in varying shapes, are to be neatly formed together and kept until you have aU twenty-six. when they should be sent to The Scrambled Letter ContAfet Editor of The Time#. Any one can participate, without cost, except employes of The Tunes. t
Rushville Girl Is Married to T. P. Rhoades The wedding of Miss Frances Kirkpatrick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Kirkpatrick of Rushville, to Thomas P. Rhoades Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Rhoades, 4638 Broadway, took place at 3:30 Saturday at the home of the bride’s parents. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Ezra Keller of Hillsboro, 111., uncle of the bridegroom. Only members of the immediate families attended. Miss Pauline Roes, Indianapolis pianist, player and Miss Mary Rose Lowry of Fortville, soloist, sang bridal airs and “Speed Thee My Arrow,” Pi Beta Phi sorority song. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore brown silk crepe tnmmed with peach colored satin. She carried a colonial bouquet of Talisman roses, gardenias and delphinium. Miss Mabel Webster of Knightstown, cousin of the bride, wore brown 4flk crepe trimmed in cream colored satin and carried a colonial bouquet of Johanna Hill roses and summer lilacs. M. Scott Waldon, Indianapolis, was the best man. Following the ceremony the couple left for a short wedding trip. They will be at home after Oct. 10 at 1227 Park avenue. The bride is a graduate of Butler university and a member of Pi Beta phi sorority. Mr. Rhoades attended Butler and belonged to Delta Tau Delta, and Sigma Delta Chi fraternities, and is a member of the editorial staff of the Indianapolis News. Indianapolis guests included Mr. and Mrs. Rhoades, Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Peggs, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Spiegel and Miss Jennie Spiegel, Mr. and Mrs. Roul E. Cornelius and Mr. and Mrs. Loran S. Hickman.
Legion Group Plans Movies for Veterans Motion pictures will be shown at 6:30 Tuesday at the United States veterans hospital under the direction of the rehabilitation committee of the American Legion auxiliary to Ir ianapolis post 4. Mrs Stella V. Norland is chairman of the committee, assisted by Mesdames W. J. Overmire and J. Burdette Little. Assisting the committee will be Messrs, and Mesdames Clarence R. Martin, John Downey, Frank Friddle, E. S. Westerville, E. P. Brennan, Henry Kane. Robert Tappman and George Gill! The annual election of officers of the post will be held at a business meeting at 8 Wednesday in the Spink-Arms. MRS. RUTH hIIKENE TO TALK ON INDIA “India” will be the subject of a talk by Mrs. Ruth Hilkene tonight at a supper meeting of the Jane T. Hendricks section of the Fairview Presbyterian Woman’s Missionary Society at the home of Mrs. Hubert H. Kemp, 7254 Pennridge drive. Assisting the hostess will be Mrs. Hila L. Burrin. Mrs. Carl R. Otto will lead devotions. Members will work for the Public Health Nursing Association at an all-day meeting of the woman’s association of the church Wednes-j day. Mrs. John M. Ritter and Mrs. Paul W. Kistler will be in charge of the luncheon preceding the business meeting. H. A. C. TO FETE ITS NEW MEMBERS New members of the Hoosier Athletic club will be honored at the first of three parties to be held tonight in the Chinese room at the club house. • Approximately seventy-five members have joined the club during the past week, and will be introduced to the old members tonight. Arrangements are in charge of John A. Lyons, chairman, Otto Roos, Lee Emmelmann, L. M. Fehrenbach, Harold Hampton, and A. F. Westland. Miss Harris Engaged Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Omie Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed--ward W. Harris. 3510 Washington boulevard, to Nick Mayer, Little Rock, Ark. The wedding will take place in October.
The Times will pay prises totaling *125 to the persons who send In the nearest correctly solved, complete set of puzzles. This does not necessarily mean that you have to solve all the puzzles to win. Neatness, accuracy, and simplicity are the main requisites. Accurate cutting and correct assembling of the pieces will be considered by the judges, whose decisions will be final, in naming the victors. Elaborate entries will receive no more favor than simple ones. Take the pieces which appear here and f taste them neatly and carefully over the etter which appears by the side of them, until you cover it completely, and follow this system on all twenty-six of the letters. All entries must be in within ten days after the last scrambled letter appears in The Timas. Alliantries become the property of The Times and will not be returned. *
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
BUSINESS AND INDUSTRIAL NEWS
New City Railway Equipment to Start and Stop Smoothly
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New Tone Quality, Depth, Added to Sparton Radios
Third Dimension Provided Through Use of Three Loud Speakers. Sparton radio engineers, it is announced, have accomplished a remarkable improvement in the quality of radio reproduction by adding a third dimension to the tone. Pointing out that the ordinary single speaker radio has but range and volume, they have added depth the blending of fully rounded sound waves—the result of Sparton's scientific arrangement of thre<* full dynamic speakers in the arc of a circle. In Model 28, shown in the illustration, 155 square inches of sound recording speaker surface-give a remarkable tone that is kept clear by the non-distorting class A amplifier; the duolinear second detector, employing two tubes in a full wave linear detector circuit, which gives an unusual smoothness in the tone delivered to the amplifier, and the level control for the suppression of nois: between stations. C. J. Kruse, president of Kruse Radio, Inc., 33 West Ohio street, is enthusiastic about the quality of the tone from this Sparton. Kruse says it will be a revelation of the fidelity with which tone can be reproduced even to those persons who have the most expensive
Benefit to Health Found in Mineral Well Product
Crazy Water Crystals Are Popular Throughout Entire World. There appeared recently in the daily papers, an article written by R. Kenneth Evans with the title, “What’s in a Name?” Evans spent two weeks at the Crazy Water hotel recently, and was so impressed that he wrote a twocolumn article. “Crazy Water,” says Evans, “is the answer to the question ‘What’s in a Name?’ “The mail that arrives at the Crazy hotel daily show conclusively that the name Crazy Water is known in all parts of the United States, Canada and Mexico and by mail clerks and postoffice employes on every railroad and every rural route., - , “The name Crazy Water was known across the wide ranges of Texas before there was another mineral well in this section of the United States. ‘ “Pioneers changed their courses toward the west, in many cases driving many miles out. their way in order to pass through the Palo Pinto mountains, and paused to drink healing draughts from the Crazy Water wells. “The name became synonymous with curative waters, for it was the only water that had any known curative powers in the early days. “When mineral wells came into being, the Crazy Water wells was the oldest and most popular mineral water, so the town grew up around the Crazy Wells. The name stuck and today probably enjoys the widest general significance of any name attached to any water in the country. “The story of how Crazy Water received its name is one that is told with many versions and in many ways. All of these stories carry with them the one of the crazy woman who drank the waters and received relief. “Today the water is responsible for the world's largest mineral water plant. It has shown the way to thousands of persons annually to be brought back to better health. “The most important development in the Crazy Water Company’s product has been the Crazy Crys-
—NEW*-ALL-ELECTRIC AV.TO^tAOfO 6-Tube $59.50 8-Tube $74.95 Easily and Quickly Installed in Any Make Car Call Lincoln 6466 for Free Demonstration Kruse Radio, Inc. 33 West Ohio St.
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tals, which are the medicinal qualities of the water evaporated down to a, solid. ’’these crystals are shipped to persons who put them in ordinary drinking water and are able to enjoy Crazy Water and its benefits. This permits Crazy Water to be sent to all parts of the world, where - otherwise it would be impractical to transport the water In bulk.” Crazy Crystals are for sale in Indianapolis at 114 East Washington street. Crazy Water is both palatable and effective in ridding the system of ailments due to faulty elimination. PASTORS TO BE NAMED • -- - • By United Press VINCENNES, Ind., Sept. 19.—Assignment of Methodist ministers for more than 350 pastorates for the ensuing year was to be made at the Indiana Methodist Episcopal conference here today. Announcement of assignments will bring to a close a week’s session of the conference.
L. H. WEAVER MILK AND CREAM “Where Purity Is Paramount” QUALITY SERVICE 1934 Madison Avefiue DRexel 4475
24-Hr. AUTO REPAIRING TOW-IN SERVICE DON HERR CO. Blley 24H4 Kjr. Ave. A Maryland
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BEN-HUR LIFE ASSOCIATION A Fraternal Beneficial Society providing for its members Legal Reserve Life Insurance An Indiana Institution established 38 years ago. Assets Over $10,000,000.00 Paid to Members and Beneficiaries Over $30,000,000.00 LOCAL BUSINESS OITFICE—BOB K. of P. BUILDING Arrius Court No. 5 meets every Wednesday evening at 322 EAST NEW YORK STREET *
James Lynch, division superintendent of Indianapolis Railways, inspects the new foot-operated automatic control equipment to be used on both the new street cars and trackless trolley cars soon to arrive in Indianapolis. Lynch says that starts and stops will be smooth and jerkless with this new apparatus. All the devices shown above will be placed below the floor, line of the new cars, and will be controlled by foot pedals. Fifteen new trackless trolley cars are to be placed in service about Nov. 1. Twenty-five new street cars will arrive several weeks later.
ICE VENDED DY SLOT MACHINE New Device Used by Polar Operated by Coins. Anew automatic coin operated ice vending machine has been installed at the Sixteenth street plant of the Polar Ice and Fuel Company. This is the first installation of this kind of machine in Indianapolis, and oniy a few such machines are in use in the United States. In these days of economizing, the Indianapolis public has taken advantage of the lower prices'secured by calling at the platform for their daily *ice requirements. The excellent service provided by this system, together with the novelty of “slot machine” ice has drawn considerable trade to the Polar plant. Sixteenth street, just west of Senate avenue. Electrical contact made by pressing a push button or inserting a dime in a coin switch starts a motor which operates an ice conveyor 10-* cated inside the storage house. As soon as a twenty-flve-pound piece of ice is discharged from the machine, the motor automatically is shut off. The piece of ice is dropped on a chute and it slides on rails through the ice house walls to a point convenient to the customer. So enthusiastic has been the reception of the public for this kind of “instant service” that the Polar company is considering installation of a number of these machines throughout the city. Operation of this machine is so interesting that many person have come from distant sections of the city to see how it lAorks. Central India is staging a “support the cow” movement. Thousands of cow “contribution boxes” are hung in conspicuous places with placards appealing to Hindus to support this sacred animal.
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nn W T NTEAMBHIF IK-vLJUS I I I I LETTERS OF CREDIT A KmF FOREIGN EXCHANGE Richard Kurt*. Foreign Dept TRAVELERS CHECKS Bunion trust*
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