Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 275, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1933 — Page 6
PAGE 6
Old Home Is Retreat for Book Talks Whispering Winds Scene of Weekly Meeting of Bocal Women. P.v BEATRICE BURG AN Timr* Woman's Tar* Editor A retreat to the country for a review of books just off the press is a weekly habit of a group of local women. In the historically significant Whispering Winds on the Brookville mad every Thursday they meet lor luncheon, a few hands of bridge
and a book talk by Mrs. Hugh Henry Hanna. The house abounds in atmosphere. Those who know its history can sense ‘lilile Mrs. Morehouse” hovering in its rooms. Tlie wife of the builder, Andrew Morehouse, was described as ‘ never weighing 83 pounds,” with a spirit indomitable and indefatigable.
, M &
Miss Kurgan
Tlie colonial style house, now owned by Mrs. Russell Flagle, was built nearly 100 years ago, and was moved from one hill to another, a distance of about five miles. Morehouse first erected a log cabin on the site. Near it he planted the first orchard in Marion county. The a.mory room recalls the days' when Morehouse stored his firearms j there to protect his family from the attacks by the Indians. Women from Indianapolis, Middletown, Shelbyville, Columbus and other neighboring towns have their; ‘country outings” each week and leisurely discussions of the late i literary editions. At each meeting' they discover some tale of old about; the house to contrast with their contact with the new. Among the local women who are j frequent visitors at the gatherings; are Mesdames Walter R. Mayer, James W. Noel, Maurice Tennant. Bert Scrvoss, David Ross. Hugh Baker and Mrs. O. S. Runnels, mother of Mrs. Hanna. Natives of the little island of j Seychelle, Port Victoria, will provide the next thrill for Mrs. L. M. Wainwright, 4014 Washington boulevard. who is steaming across the Indian ocean on the S. S. Carinthia for a world cruise. Dancing by the natives and demonstrations of their I arts and crafts will be the highlight of the adventure.
Presidents of Two City Clubs Are Elected at Luncheons
Mrs. Walter McCarthy was chosen president of the Irvington Coterie Club and George Edwards was elected lo head the Et Cetera Club at luncheon meetings, held Monday. Mrs. Marshall D. Lupton 5070 Pleasant Run boulevard, was hostess for the Irvington Coterie Club, whose other new officers are Mrs. Chester Albright, vice-president; Mrs. Harvey Ferguson, secretary: Mrs. James Denny, treasurer, and
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Behmer, 2210 Broadway, have returned from a trip to Mexico City. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Kennington, 3907 Washington boulevard, are at home after spending the winter in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Malott White and Miss Katherine Brown are on a trip to California. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shields for the week-end at their country home, Foxeliffe, near Martinsville, were Messrs, and Mesdames Lowell Wilson. Kurt Pantzer and Earl B. Barnes. Mrs. William C. Bobbs has returned to her home, 160 East Fourteentth street, after a visit in Naples Fla. Mrs. Charles M. Wells and her daughter Mary Ann. who have been visiting Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Wheeler, 3951 North Pennsylvania street, have gone to Chicago to join Mr. Wells. Mrs. Charles M. Wells and daughter. Mary Ann, who have been visiting Mrs. Wells' parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Wheeler, 3951 North Pennsylvania street, have returned to Chicago. OFFICERS ELECTED BY SPORTING CLUB The Sports Club of Indianapolis, affiliated with the International Physical Culture Clubs, met Monday night at 310 East Twenty-fourth street with Miss Clara Bush president, presiding. Other officers, recently elected, include Miss Edith Manning, vicepresident; Miss Margaret Pecsok, secretary, and Harold A. Norris, treasurer. The clubs activities include the outdoor sports, hiking, canoeing, horseback riding, swimming, tennis and motor trips to various places in Indiana. MISS HILL TO BE HOSTESS FOR CLUB Miss Janet Hill, 6051 Central avenue, will be hostess tonight for a spread meeting of the Thesi Club, which will honor Mrs. Albert Sutton. formerly Miss Ina Darnell. Miscellaneous shower gifts will be presented to Mrs. Sutton.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Boked bananas, cooked wheat cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, rye muffins, miik, coffee. Luncheon — Fish chowder, spinach and egg salad, Washington cream pie, grape juice. Dinner — Veal patties, buttered rice, creamed carrots, mixed vegetable salad, peach pandowdy, milk, coffee.
.Flatten Your Abdornen a a a a a a This Exercise Will Help Make You Trim
~ ' V •v. I A 6S You may not accomplish this the first day . . . but persevere.
Delegates Are Appointed at Club Luncheon Mrs. Ross E. Coffin, newly elected president of the Inter Alia Club, appointed committees for the year at the luncheon-meeting today at the home of Mrs. Douglas H. White, 5638 North Delaware street. Mrs. White, as program chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames Elmer W. Piel, E C Gouldman, Roger Norton Williams and Marguerite Hanson. Delegate to the local council is Mrs. Robert Workman, with Mrs. L. A. Brink as alternate. Mrs. Joseph Parker Merriman is delegate to the Indiana federation with Mrs. O. L. Cunning as alternate. Phottf Indorsers delegate is Mrs. Lillian D. Jones. Her alternate is Mrs. John Titus. Mrs. George Q. Bruce was appointed parliamentarian, and Mrs. L. A. Turnock was named chairman of the membership committee. Mrs. White, program chairman, will act as press reporter. The program which followed the 1 o’clock luncheon, included book reviews of ‘ Magnolia Street” by Mrs. White, and “Oliver Wendell Holmes,” by Mrs. Jones. Mrs. White Is Host Mrs. Randell H. White, 920 East Twenty-seventh street, will entertain members of the Zcta Rho sorority with a Easter party Wednesday night. Inactive members will attend.
Mrs. E. D. Donnell, chairman of the program committee, composed of Mesdames Bert Morgan and Seward Craig. Covers were laid for twenty members, with appointments in yellow and white. Mrs. Alva Graham of Woodstock. 111., daughter of the hostess, was a guest. Billy Shirley, soil of Mrs. Luther Shirley, a member, sang. Assistant hostesses wore Mesdames Fred Stilz, F. M. Crowell and Bloomfield Moore. Assisting Mrs. Edwards as head of the Et Cetera Club will be Mrs. Ralph Kcnnington, first vice-presi-dent; Mrs. Henry L. Patrick, second vice-president; Mrs. Fred Robinson, corresponding secretary: Mrs. Bert C. Fuller, recording secretary, and Mrs. Lawrence F. Orr, treasurer. The meeting was held at the Shively tea room, 1930 North Alabama street.
TRICKY SUIT
|ii|§i jiiippiiii
Verna Hillie
Py \ I' A Service HOLLYWOOD. March 28. Bathing sui*£ get trickier every time movie actresses go out to Palm Springs for a week-end. Verna Hillie wears a blue and white ribbed suit that has a trick tie-on shirt of the blue that has its sash of novelty diagonal woven blue and white stripes, like the yoke and shoulder straps, as most of them are. Cast Is Feted Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Ott and daughters. 1019 North Bancroft street, entertained with a buffet supper Saturday night for members cf the cast cf "Deacon Dubbs." presented by the Brookside Community house members.
This is the fourth of twelve daily articles by Jac Auer, widely known New York bodv buildine expert. outlining a series of simple exercises to improve your looks and health. Clio the articles daily, each dav going through the exercises previously outlined and adding the new ones. BY JAC AUER Written for NEA Service CALENDER waistlines and flat abdomens are the ideal of American women this spring. New spring suits won't look right, unless you get waistline in ; trim. You have a month in which td do it. Start now! After stretching the waistline, | as you did Monday, you now' are ready for a back and abdominal : stretch. This exercise pulls your waistline, and better yet, eventually holds your waistline stretched | by strengthening the muscles that do the trick. Stand erect, feet apart, clasp your fingers behind your head and step forward with your left foot, holding your w'eight on the back one. Now pull your head forward, clear down to your knees on your extended left leg, if you can get it that far. You probably can’t—the first day. But keep persevering. That is your aim. Straighten, stretch your head down toward your right knee. Before you start stretching your head down, drop your head backward on to your clasped hands. This stretches your abdomen first, then gives you more of a back stretch as you bend fonvard. Try this exercise two times for each leg, the first day. Increase the count until you reach ten. It is one of the best waistline stretches ever used. Combined with the other exercises in this series, it will go a long way toward giving you the Easter waistline you W'ant. Next— Reducing the thighs. FEDERATION WILL SPONSOR EXHIBIT International Federation of Business and Professional Women will sponsor an international exposition of fine and applied arts to be held early in May at the Grand Musee in Amsterdam. Signora Antonietta Paoli Pogliana, a distinguished Italian sculptor, is in charge of the exhibit, which will be open to a limited number of women artists. Although exhibits have been held by branch federations in several European countries, this is the first one on an international scale. INMATES TO HEAR MUSICALS BY CLUB The Wednesday Afternoon club will give an entertainment Wednesday at the Marion county infirmary with Mesdames Homer Britan, William Kelly. C. L. Hackerd and P. C. Nicholes as hostesses. Miss Grace Reed will lead the devotions, and Mrs. Paul Ameter is in charge of the musical program, which will include piano selections by Miss Jane Hackerd. accordion numbers by Robert Rothman and Richard Schaffer, and songs by Betty Marie Starr, accompanied by Mrs. Katherine Ortto. Mrs. Harry Schwab. Betty Lou Burcham. Billy Gill and Betty Marie Starr will give readings. JEWISH COUNCIL’S BOARD WILL MEET The executive board of the Indianapolis section. National Council of Jewish Women, will meet at 9:30 Wednesday at the Kirshbaum Community Center. Mrs. Sultan Cohen will preside. COMMITTEE fIEETS AT TAYLOR ESTATE Mrs. Russell Fortune, chairman of the entertainment committee of the Tiaders Point Hunt, and members of her committee met for luncheon today at the County Squire chicken place, on the estate of Blair Taylor.
Sororities
Alpha chapter of the Omega Kappa sorority will meet at 6 Wednesday night at the horn? of Miss Emily Zoyles. Plans for a rush party to be given by the organization will be completed. Theta Zeta Chi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Mary Elizabeth High, 85 North Dearborn street. Psi Phi sorority will meet at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Helen Shedrun. 2917 North Delaware. Beta chapter of Alpha Beta Phi sorority will hold candlelight pledge services tonight at the home of Miss Mildred Hohman. 1005 East Ravmond street, for the following: Misses Marie Osterman, Dorothy Addington. Helen Murphy and Loretta Rinehart. Druids to Be Feted Mrs. A. J. Resener. will entertain the Past Grand Arch Druids Club with an all-day meeting Thursday at her home. 120 North Seventh street. Beech Grove. Mrs. Hattie M. Hopkins will assist the hostess. Announce *Y’ Service The Rev. A. A. Heist will preach at the Lenten services Wednesday noon at thp central Y. W. C. A. Music will be under the direction of the music department of the Phyllis Wheatley unit, i
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Girls Win Few Mates in Offices Husbands More Likely to Be Found in the Social World. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer Vassar girls, according to the j latest statistics, are more apt to j find their husbands in the social j than in the business world. At | which fact, presumably, we are ex- | pected to open our mouths wide in ! amazement and to show signs of the ' utmost surprise. But who, we may ask, ever im--1 agined that the career in which a modern young woman indulged herj self was anything but a disability in the old game of husband-hunt - | mg? Who ever was mad enough to ; indorse a course in stenography as a preparation for romance? The truth of the matter is, of | course, that most employers are so j bald and settled and utterly out of j the running that there is no conj ceivable question of romance beI tween these aging gentlemen and their youthful stenogs. Choice Is Easy As between the penniless young j half back from Princeton, who of- | fers her an occcasional bottle ol i dago red and her portly employer, who urges, once a month, that they might split a quart of Pomery, your typical Vassar girl has small effort in making a choice. She may take both, and it is only the former that she takes seriously. The business route as a road to marriage is no worse, perhaps for the college than for the non-college ! girl, but it still is a bad second to ! the special means to the same end. For there is no spot in America I today where snobbery is more evident than in your average office. And it is a snobbery not of social, but of business preference, and so works against practically all the women involved. The poor little Vassar girl may be the daughter of an oil king, but she has no more chance of being courted by the younger executives than by the prince of Wales so long as she is running a comptometer machine. Conquest Score Is Low The business freshman, whether she comes from Vassar or from the nearest business college, may have a very unpleasant time of it from 9 to 5 and it is not surprising that the working girls’ score of sentimental conquests is low. The working girl encounters her potential suitors at the least suitable and propitious moment of their day; she runs into them at a time when they are more engrossed in problems inimical to her charm than the sleep-till-noon girl has any chance of going. And the fact that she runs up any score at all of sentimental conquests is ground for some surprise. Romance, it seems, will thrive even in the sparse and pebbly soil offered by most offices. But that is no invitation for the layer-cake-making girls to rush toward jobs sa an easy road to romance. They are much better off, thank you, as they are.
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- C*} o tern No. O £t U 3 Size Street City State Name
§ j 5203 u £ A I) NJV) </
“GIBSON" BLOUSE Here's the 1933 version of the "Gibson Girl” blouse, and what it does to your figure is little short of magic. Huge puffed sleeves b oaden and straighten your shoulders: the smooth, fitted silhouette makes you melt away at the waistline. Then, there's the button closing, straight up to the tiny round collar that makes you look like a little girl masquerading as her big sister. Os course, it's easy to make. And be sure to play up its picturesque air with just the right fabric. That means be sure to choose a crisp matelasse taffeta, organdie or gingham in a colorful plaid or, perhaps, a checked silk or cloky cotton—all newly revived fabrics of the "bicycle era.” Size 16 requires l 7 i yard 36-inch plaid material, I* yard plain. New spring fashion book is out! Send Send for it—just check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern, 15 cents.
Have a Hobby Grandfather Clocks Are Darlings of Antique Fans
BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON. THE eighteenth century has been called the golden age of Eng- ! lish clock making, for although deI veloped to a high degree in many European countries, the art at- | tained marked perfection in Engi land. This was particularly so with the j long case, or grandfather, clock and j the beauty of the cases, the intricate movements, and the handsome dials proclaim today the artistry and excellent workmanship of many English clock makers. Edwin R. Gilgour of this city owns several wonderful English grandfather clocks that deserve to be museum pieces. The one illustrated has a Sheraton case of mahogany elaborately inlaid. The top is decorated with paintings of Masonic significance and a Toby jug profile is inlaid at the side of the glass door. The dial shows the moon phases, paintings representing the seasons, and a subsidiary dial gives day and ! month. This timepiece was pur- ; chased in Liverpool and was made by J. Stancliff. who died in 1790. ! He was noted for the verses which ;he wrote on his dials. This one I reads: I serve thee here wilh all my might I tell the hour both day and night If thou wilt example take from me, Serre Thy God as I serve thee. Another of Mr. Gilgour’s handsome clocks, made by Bertles of ■ Liverpool about 1770. has a Chinese i Chippendale case of carved ma- | hogany with brickwork. This unique 1 construction is accomplished by i wood overlay, molded to resemble ! layers of brick. The top is ornamented with insets of blue Bristol glass decorated with peacocks and the dial in addition to being elegantly engraved has elaborate brass ornaments applied on the spandrels (corners). a a a THE clock movement is distinctive as four hands work from the center. One is the hour hand, one for the day of the month, another for the moon phases, and the fourth is a sweep-center second hand, which feature is very rare. Joseph Smith of Bristoll told spelling) signed his name, some time before 1780, on the third clock’s herringbone decorated brass dial. In the arch above the dial he placed a small ship in full sail, which moves back and forth with the pendulum. This rocking motion gives the illusion of a ship at sea. Still another of Mr. Gilgour’s clocks has a William and Mary case of red lacquer, which does not mean that it is covered with red print, but that figures are in red relie' on a dark ground. Some of the earliest rases of this type were made in England and sent on tea ships to be lacquered in China. This case may have had that romantic experience, as it was made by Robert Andrews of London in 1710. IN 1738 John Hancock sent the following order to England. ‘‘l desire the favor of you to procure for me and send with rrfy spring goods a handsome chiming clock of the newest fashion, the work neat and good, with a walnut tree case veneer work with dark lively branches. On top, instead of balls, let there be three handsome carved figures gilt with burnished gold. “I would have the case without the figures ten feet long and the j price not to exceed twenty guineas.” ; Asa clock of this description is un- j known among Hancock's furnishings. and a lacquered clock belong- I ing to him is in the Museum of Fine j Arts in Boston, he may have discovered that the “newest fashion” was for lacquered cases and changed his order. A lacquered grandfather clock by Edward Faulkner of London stood for many years in the parlor of the Red Horse Tavern at South Sudbury, Mass. When Henry Ford restored the old hostelry, now called “The Wayside Inn,” he located this timepiece and replaced it in its old setting. A grandfather clock being included in restoration of the inn calls attention to the fact that Longfel- ; low’s poem, “The Old Clock on the Stairs,” is given much credit for the revival of interest in grandfather clocks and his “Tales of a Wayside Inn” have perpetuated the memory of that famous landmark. a a a MRS. THOMAS S. HOOD SR. so admired Dr. Joshua Stanfield's English clocks that she commissioned the doctor’s brother in England to find one for her. The result was a grandfather signed Buckle of Stratford. The case, with a broken arch is elaborately inlaid mahogany veneer and is especially wide. An amusing peculiarity is the absence of back feet, which neccessi- ; tates fastening it to the wall. The I arched dial has the seasons, moon ; phases, two subsidiary dials, and very handsome hands. Few persons have the space to j accommodate an extensive clock > collection, but that difficulty did not 1 deter D. E. Wetherfield of South i Kensington, England. His noted ; collection of 272 clocks, “each a ! gem,” was kept in a moderate sized ! house. There were twenty-five in the living room, thirteen in the dining room, and seven in the bathroom. He must have had a very patient and understanding wife. Plan Box Supper Council 57, D. of A. will give an old-fashioned box supper in Junior | hall, 210 East Ohio street, at 8 ! Wednesday night. Mrs. Florence Williamson is in charge of the arrangements. The Arbuckle Brothers, j Sunshine Trio and Happy Jack will be on the program.
Daily Recipe ! SPRING SOUP 3 cups meat stock , 1-2 cup green peas 6 asparagus points 1 tablespoon string j beans, cut in small j pieces . 1 tablespoon shredded i lettuce Add the vegetables to the j meat stock and cook until : vegetables are tender. Garnish S by sprinkling the surface of j the soup with finely chopped j watercress or parsley. I
fefg *'* wHra ’LL § A grandfather clock worthy of a place in a museum.
Announce Meeting Olive Branch Social Circle will have a call meeting Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. R. H. Hollywood, 5555 Broadway.
Manners and Morals - BY JANE JORDAN
Tell vour secrets to Jane Jordan. Her sympathetic counsel will help you see what to do. Dear Jane Jordan—l am 29 years old and for the last four years I have been married to a wonderful man two years younger. He treats me like a queen, and there isn't a thing I want that he doesn't manage to get for me. For eight years before I married I went with a man much older than myself. Now I find myself thinking of him almost all the time. I've tried to overcome this, but I can’t. He lives in another town. Therefore. I see him only every few months. That doesn't seem to help at all. What would you advise me to do? JAP. Answer —I advise you to let bygones be bygones. Many a woman happily married to one man carries the ghost of another in her heart — a ghost whose name is Might-Have-Been. Each love affair, poignantly felt, leaves a mark which is dimmed, but never wholly erased, by the passage of time. There always is some part of the self given which never was returned. It belongs irrevocably to the one who took it, A clear-thinking woman will not be misled by the shadow of a lover who has passed. He is a memory which she recalls in the secret places of the heart with pleasure or with sadness, according to her mood. But if she is wise, it is only the memory she recalls, not the man. Sentimentalists would have us believe that lovers parted by the cruelty of circumstances can take up their love at any point in the future when they chance to meet again under more favorable conditions. But, like most sentimental notions, its truth is open to question. People who have been separated for a number of years undergo irretrievable changes. Deprived of the opportunity to develop together, each has gone his way unsubjected to the influence of the other, while the water flowed steadily under the bridge. They meet again, only to find that they no longer are the same people. The old harmony is gone, broken by separate experiences, broken by ; the claims of new ties, new loves,, and alien ambitions. The moment when those two could have gone on together as one has j passed. They can not pick up their shattered dreams .and make them whole once more as if nothing had happened. Love has not the hardy endurance which a mawkish world ascribes to it. On the contrary, nothing perishes more quickly under untoward conditions. In your case I see no occasion for tragedv. Your husband is all that he should be. If you lost him, he, too. would live in your memory as lives this other. He, too, has left his mark cut deep in your existence. To play him false would do more damage to you than to him. Do not be deceived by your sentimental at : titude toward your first lover, nor let it tempt you to bring his person into the peace of the present scene. Then when his ghost walks, no one will be disturbed but yourself. When love is so easily upset and destroyed, those who have the good fortune to attain it should cherish the precious commodity more care-
Beautyrange Junior mEsSI m ■■ a : k- M J m• 5 5 Cash 1 And Your Old Range \_ Delivered and Installed. Lighter, Insulated, Heat Control. Citizens Gas Cos. 47 So. I’enn*ylTania
Lenox China, Made in U. 5.7 Used by Mrs. Roosevelt for White House Meals Wakefield Pattern Displayed at Mayer’s; Felt Bags Popular for Spring; Breakfast Trays Adjustable. BY HELEN LINDSAY. THE simple menus used by Mrs. Roosevelt in White House meals are served on United States made china, from the Lenox factory, in j Trenton. N. J. The pattern of the White House china is a gold band i one, designed with the United States coat of arms. Previous to the World war, a German make of China was the offi-
cial Presidential design. The Lenox pattern replaced this during patriotic enthusiasm in war-time days. Exclusive with Lenox china, which compares admirably with that of foreign countries, is the Washington Wakefield pattern. This was copied from a few pieces of English make, found in the home of George Washington. The design was reproduced in the American product in a lovely, rich ivory tint. This pattern is displayed at Charles Mayer's, and is the one which Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt have selected for use in the state executive's home. Another Lenox pattern, “Mystic,” was that chosen by intimates of Governor Leslie, as a gift shortly before he left office. tt tt tt Felt Bags Are Fetch'mg FELT bags in the new spring neutral shades, as well as in colors, are being shown at L. E. Mor-
| rison’s on Pennsylvania street. The new bag material is made in various : designs, creased folds giving some of the new models a tucked appear- ! ance. Metal trimming finishes practically all of the new spring bags, which j are noticeably smaller than those which were popular during the winter. Patents, leathers showing a pig-skin grain, and pinned calf-skin* fashion the more tailored bags. One new feature is a novel fastening, with three metal discs appearing as a trimming design. When slid into place, these discs reveal an j intricate fastening idea. j Compartments for memorandum book, pencil, and mirror are separate j from the money compartment in some of the newer bags, and "zipper'’ | fastenings are of smaller mesh. One of the most attractive new patent leather bags has a separate pocket for the powder puff, with a large.mirror lifting up just above it. a a a Breakfast Trays Are Adjustable ADJUSTABLE breakfast trays in pastel enamel finish can be used by convalescents, for reading and writing purposes. The trays have j small stands, and tiff to just the right and comfortable angle. Trays o£ I this description are shown at H. P. Wasson & Cos.
j fully, and guard it against painful and unnecessary shocks. In other words, if you have any wisdom worth speaking of, you’ll let your sleeping triangle lie. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am writing in regard to a letter you printed in your column from a Washington high school girl. I go to Washington high school and now r I am a sophomore. When I first started I was like this girl who wrote. I could not get acquainted. Now there are many boys who walk with me in the' halls, and talk to me when they see me. •Looks count a lot, yet manners count most. This hot stuff doesn’t go so good with them, and a bit of humor helps a lot. To a Washington high school girl from a WASHINGTON HIGH SCHOOL GIRL. Answer—l think it would be nice if you wrote a little more completely and told us how you overcame your difficulty. How did you Figure out what was wrong, and how did you go about correcting your mistake? It is true that good manners are a valuable asset and a great help in attracting friends. Good humor is appreciated by all people, and friendliness is a charming thing. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—ln answer to your letter in The Times, I would like for you to call on me at your earliest convenience, as there is nothing in this world I rather would have than the love of a daughter. lam 52 the 27th of this month, and my husband is 58. Good-by till we meet. With love. MRS. W. W. K. Answer—ls Lonesome Girl will send her address, I have two let- I ters for her.
Card Parties
team of Marion Council 738, Security Benefit Association, will give a social and entertainment at 8 Wednesday night at the hall, 116 East Maryland street. Drill team of Women of the Moose will give a benefit card party at 8:30 tonight at the home of Mrs John B. Switzer. 1422 Fletcher avenue. D. of A. Pabst Council Association will give a monthly card party at 8 Wednesday night at the home of Mrs. Mabel Ricks,' 234 North Sheffield avenue.
j, *25 °° in Cash M To Be Given Away : m BETSY ROSS 9 NAME CONTEST Additional prizes of five one-pound boxes of our famous “Lavender Sweets” Chocolates. The Betsy Ross Candy Shops, Inc., have, for the past two years, sold their delicious Milk Chocolate assortment without a name. The increasing demand for this package makes it imperative that we secure a name that will properly describe this delicious popular package. here is all you do Believing that you must try these luscious milk chocolates before you can possibly suggest a name that will amply describe them, we ask that you go to any Betsy Ross Shop, purchase a box of the milk chocolates, and the sales girl will hand you a contest blank on which will be printed the simple rules governing the contest. This is the only way a contest blank may be secured because we do not want any one to name this package until they have actually tried our milk chocolates. Contest Closes at Midnight April Bth, 1933 prizes: Ist Prize S2O H 2nd Prize $5 w ‘ 3rd-7th Prizes I lb. | Box “Lavender Sweets” I
3IARCH 28, 1933
m
Mrs. Lindsay
Golf Playing to Be Started at Broadmoor Women golfers of Broadmoor Country Club will open its season with a noon luncheon Saturday, April 29. An obstacle putting match will precede the luncheon. Mrs. I. G. Kahn, golf chairman has announced that woman’s day at the club will be on Tuesday. Guests will be entertained the last Tuesday of each month. Mrs. Kahn appointed Mrs. Bernia Lehman, chairman of the rules committee. Her assistants are Mrs. David Lurvey, and Mrs. W. R. Borinstein.
PERMANENTS EAsTEn jilif| mFor 10 Days Only A beautiful miniature Photo of yourself or friend with the purchase of any of the permanents listed below. The miniatures are FRAMED and HAND COLORED in OILS. (Photos by PLATT Studios.) No strings attached to this offer. SI’I RAI.KTTK S T K A M T OMC H \> !<;. Complete \vllh Shampoo anil p Pnsh-I p CtI.JU Our Standard Oil. Complete With Shampoo on and Set Tnnie and Oil Wave. Complete " ith Shampoo DA and Set {)J.UU Permanents Taken from 8 A. M. BEAUTE ARTES 601 Roosevelt Bldg. Opposite Clay pool Hotel Platt studio Kntranre AVitli or Without Appointment M. or>7o M. chj;o
