Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 215, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1933 — Page 9

7AN 17, 1033

Founder of Club Feted at Party IVlult urn - in- Par vo 0 rde r Celebrates An n iversary With Frolic. Mrs. Emil H Soufflot. founder of the Multum-in-Parvo Literary Club, was honored today at the cclebiation of the club’s seventh anniversary a? the Columbia Club. Mis. i;rnest w. Fullenwider was hostess. A brief history was given by Mrs. I'ullenwider during a oandlelighting r-rvier. Mr: Frank W. Wiemcr, j resident., presented ' Works of Alfred E. Tennyson” to Mrs. Soufflot, y jrh a shower of Sweetheart roses. Mrs. Carl H. Irgang presented a ftud.v of Italian Gods" ns a part of the year’s program of Greek and Homr n mythology. Mrs. Florence Webster Long, guest, speaker, has as her subject, “Behind the Lines,'’ and a musical program was given by Mr: Gerald Hyde. The tea table, laid with a Chinese ];irc cloth was centered with a birthday cake, which was surrounded by American Beauty roses and fern. The rake was iced with the club emblem, the lamp of knowledge. Mrs. Soufflot cut the cake and Mrs. Weimer and Mrs. Adolph Wagner, vice-president, poured tea. Speaks at Tudor Jlatl M. Wallis Sparks, secretary of admissions of Stephens college in Columbus, Mo., addressed the student body of Tudor hall this morning.

| LOOK! t 'tariff ) Vi fcJgPP If : : j ' i, I J slo-baked WONDER BREAD • SMALL-FAMILY SIZE • GOOD NEWS bread for sc? Sounds almost FAMILIES, TOO VTtoo good to be true! But the news It’s the year’s hig food bargain for small s%*L**J&L* : Make your bread money do full duty! Buy HI | LONG WONDER BREAD the 5 C loaf you know is good. Buy the loaf fl with Good Housekeeping’s famous seal on fffflßßWfo The big economy loaf its bright balloon \\ rapper. For the week - AMHHhH • end, buy the Long loaf pictured on ! REDUCED IN PRICE j Wise mothers oflarge families save by serving r , ■,. / ? /V/AfC * • a large loaf. For them. Long Wonder Bread is //Us “/I / continental baking CO. a reaTTood bargain. More slices, bigger slices, more good bread at anew low price. If vour YOU GET THE BEST BREAD FROM YOUR GROCER °'"'

TT'SGDR AfW 8Y BRUC£ CATTON THE spirit of pre-war Prussianism rules Germany once more.! Except that the Hohenzollerns have not been recalled, the nation is firmly in the hands of the men who muddled their way stupidly into a disastrous war. The social and political progress of the post-war years has been canceled. So says Edgar Ansel Mowrer, veteran foreign correspondent, in “Germany Puts the Clock Back,” a sobering and pessimistic study of current trends in Germany. It is a tjook that sheds anew light on the things that have happened in Germany recently—and it is also a Look that gives one an uneasy feeling that some dark and stormy days lie ahead. The treaty of Versailles, says Mr. Mowrer, is very largely responsible lor the revival of Prussiamsm. By placing Germany :n an intolerable . situation, it created in the ordinary German an implacable determination to see things changed, and gave rise to deep disillusionment about the public. But the political ineptitude of Republican leaders, Mr. Mowrer as- ; serts, is also partly responsible. These men permitted the army to become a semi-independent caste in the control of the junkers; they j failed to give a permanent form to | the democratic, pacifistic spirit that filled the land in 1919. And today, as a result, reaction is in the saddle again and militarism has had a "cfcirth. Pi-bl? ’t,l by Morrow, this book is nr. T.ST

Bustle’s Back; Fetching Style Allures Paris BY MARY KNIGHT I'nitfd Tres* Staff Correspondent PARIS. Jan. 17.—The younger generation will he.ve to run to the dictionary, for the "bustle” is back. It was to have been expected, after the return of the Empress Eugenie . hats a few months ago and the leg-o’-mutton sleeves. Mme. Schiaparelli is the culprit, 1 for she stepped in where other style : creators feared to tread and put bustles back where they once were flaunted. Hers are not the same old mat-tress-like fillers of horsehair and canvas. She makes her bustles out of pleats and folds. Mrs. Reginald Fellowes was one | of the first of the best dressed women of the Paris smart-set to wear the rejuvenated bustle, but she wears it on an all-gold gown, so that the eye is diverted. This golden dress and jacket are the sensation of the hour in Paris. The cloth resembles pure gold, being thick and draping easily. The dress, severely plain, is beltless, very slim and fastened beneath the left arm by a row of small triangular metal clips. The bustle is on the jacket, made of straight pleats, an example of Madame Schiaparelli's favorite feature of the moment. Mrs. Brown to Talk “Man, Women and Manners of the Eighteenth Century” will be subject of a lecture by Mrs. Demarehus Brown Tuesday, Jan. 24, at the Proplyaeum. i

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ESTELLE CREAGH IS HEAD OF. CLUB Miss Estelle Crcagh was elected president of the Young Women's Democratic Club at the annual election held recently. She succeeds Mrs. William W. Rich. Other officers for the coming year are Miss Katherine Fisch. vice-president;

FIRST IN fe INDIANAPOLIS 1 DEMAND WE REPEAT H NEW YORK ANI> TAKIS CRAZE I permanent! Sr™. „. . , YYIIV THIS yvaye is si terror, m ■sdpP Original |_| t is a TONIC YY AYE that re- |L v ,, Price * conditions jour hair, leaving HH Pf ||jy s££.9s O—it '‘produce* a deep, .Iron* H UftU: “ wave on every texture of hair, O produces perfect ringlet H BSa COMPLETE Our Own J *nds. ■Bj YY ITH A— NO OIL TREATMENTS neces- ||g SHAMPOO Secret sary before or after this wave. 88%; n'li-i p FORMULA J— 11 s *’.vs ""til Hie hair stows ■ THIS WEEK" ONLY 1 Try otir combination Tonic and Oil YY ave. complete with (TIO EsSI shampoo and Uniter wave. Regular SlO.bo value sp |raj BEAUTE ARTES I —Platt Studio Entrance—--601-ROOSEVELT BLDG.-601 I BE Sure You Get Into the Right Shop ILLINOIS AND WASHINGTON STREETS LI. 0670 No Appointment Necessary LI. 0670 | hhhhhhhhhhh

Mrs. Pauline Kapmeyer. secretary,' and Miss Marie Hansen, treasurer. 1 Directors named were Mrs. Marie Hansen, treasurer. Directors named were Mrs. Marie Hadley, Mrs. Marcia Murphy, Mrs. i Ernest Frick. Mrs. William W. Rich, Miss Catherine Ray. Mrs. Georgia Whitaker, Miss Rosemary Fogarty, 1 1 and Miss Elzabeth Lahrman.

We pay more for old furniture than anyone else in the city Before you sell any of your old furniture SEE VS! M c guarantee to give you more than any one in Indianapolis, for any old furniture you may have, regardless of its age or condition, in exchange for any new furniture you may select. L. I). FOSTER, Mgr. FREE DELIVERY IN INDIANA! STYLE - - ular Cut-Price values. Quality Suites Priced as Low as s#§l fyS LIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON ANY OLD FURNITURE Y<mi oill pnibably never Suites as Low as LIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON ANY OLD FURNITURE ST quality /£} s•"> DOWN tri# DURABILITY - - be satisfied at the great Jr r ' n,| -y y savings you make. Beautiful Suites as Low as s#l| wf| - - A LIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE MADE FOR jf ANY OLD PIECE OF FURNITURE YOU MAY HAVE

PRICES *5 SMILES wondering just how much farther you '•ould get by with it. the January 1931 Buick coupe $545 | Clearance Sale with the dealers ail cleaning their stocks for spring. the 1931 Chevrolet Sedan Landau 335 price, ~n the ta.s about the various 1931 Chevrolet Conne dnn a,lfo showrooms are the lowest we ever liJJi oneiroiet coupe 400 ran reran. The car- are all low in 1932 Chevrolet Coupe 375 price, hut high in quality of denend- „ able service. BK WISH HI V NOW. Chevrolet Cosen ••••••••••••••• 25 pelectinn nevor hotter. Corn? on sr r *t Chrysler. Model 60 Sedan 65 !if if, fr .T . n '' rr - Tine ■ b ” t J I the old nus and step in to anr of the # 1930 Essex Coach 195 dealer? listed hen- and buy toda *o * inol . r I ynu’l! be smilinsr like the chan above 1931 Ford Deluxe Coupe •••*••••••• 245 J who bought one of these used c/irfc and 1 1928 Oakland Coach 94 I i*. distre-sed look behind him. j Check Times Want Ada for auto bar-Willys-Knight Sedan 75 gains. 1932 Ford Tudor 265 1931 Graham Sedan 325 \ Read About These Buys in 1929 Oldsmobile Landau Sedan 225 1931 Plymouth Four-Door Sedan ... 199 ] frtirfh SBT VS? W M 1931 Studebaker President Sedan... 825 • Ts*. M 1930 Ford l l —Ton Truck 100 M _ WfW A Mjfik m 1931 Chevrolet Stake Body 345 9 W W • AAV 1930 Ford Model A Truck 295 (TIMES WANT ADS) TURN TO PAGE 12 TONIGHT!

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