Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 286, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 April 1933 — Page 8

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Club Ideas to Feature Home Show Amateur Groups Hard at Work on Projects for Exhibit. BY BEATRICE BL’RGAN Tlmr* Woman's Pate Editor A vision of the future in home beautification will be depicted this year at the Indianapolis Home Complete Exposition, April 22 to 29, in the manufacturers building of the state fairgrounds. Designs in structure and exterior enhancements will

carry the spectators a pace ahead of the present trend. Women will share in the fancy of the future. Amateur gardeners are visioning their dream gardens from the point of view of modernity, and w i 1 1 reproduce them at the show'. All the local garden clubs and the Indiana Fed-

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Miss Burgan

eration of Garden clubs are being very secretive in the development of their projects. No one will" know what their fancies are until the show opens. The women will realize their ambitions to create their favorite . beauty spots, enhanced by the newness of recent developments. With all facilities at their disposal, their ideas will be developed easily. Committees Co-Operate The clubs which are enrolled in the project are the Indianapolis, North End, Marigold, Forrest Hills, Irvington and Neophyte Garden clubs. Their presidents are Mesdames W. Richardson Sinclair; Robert Ramsay, William Gabe, Woodburn Masson, W. M. South and R. H. Ransburg. Mrs. Perry O'Neal heads i the state federatiton. Fred C. Horne, chairman of the amateur garden committee, is cooperating with the clubs in construction of their projects. Watch World Fair The modernistic home with appropriate furnishings will interest the homemaker, who is attracted by the cubistic tendencies of the modern conception. Promoters are following closely the world fair developments in Chicago in order to keep in step with the new ideas. The show is being sponsored by the Indianapolis Home Builders Association, the Indianapolis Real Estate board, the Chamber of Commerce, the Electric League of Indianapolis, and Allied Florists of Indianapolis, Inc.

ELECT DELEGATES FOR CONVENTION Delegates from Alpha chapter to the national convention of Sigma Delta Pi, national teachers’ sorority, have been elected: Mrs. Mary Easley and Miss Marie Orr, with Miss Marjorie Ford and Miss Hazel Hart as alternates. The convention wll be held May 6 and 7 in Peru, with the Epsilon chapter as hostess. Newly elected officers of the local chapter are Mrs. Easley, president; Miss Virginia Streeter, vicepresident; Mrs. Mildred Levey, recording secretary; Miss Marie Sullivan, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Ida Brown, treasurer; Mrs. Helen Bain, warder: and Miss Ruth Patterson, historian. UNIVERSITY I VOMEN CLOSE CONVENTION Mrs. Paul E. Tombaugh and Mrs. Ward Biddle of Bloomington were chosen vice-president and secretary respectively at the closing session of the two-day convention of the Indiana branch, American Association of University Women at the Lincoln Saturday. Mrs. Erwin F. Miller of Anderson continues as president and Miss Frankie Jones of La Porte as treasurer. Convention in June Hamilton-Berry chapter of the Service Star Legion will meet at 2 Tuesday at the home of Mrs. O. E. Green. 2235 Broadway, with Mrs. Ruth M. Maxwell presiding. Plans will be made for the state convention of the legion, to be held in the city in June. Mar riaeje Announced Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Keller, 244 North Belleview place, announce the marriage of ti*eir daughter. Miss Twighla Lou Keller. Carl A. Hollis, son of Albert Hollis, 1800 South Lynnhurst drive. Corps to Dine Alvin P. Hover, W. R. C. will give a noon dinner Friday at Ft. Friendly, followed by a business meeting at 2:30. Mothers Will Meet Newman Mothers' Club of Butler university will meet at 2 Monday at Newman hall.

A Day's Menu Breakfast — Orange juice, cereal, cream, crisp broiled bacon, muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — New carrot puree, toast sticks, onion sandwiches, rhubarb tapioca pudding with custard sauce, grape juice. Dinner — Cream of corn soup with popcorn, broiled halibut steaks, horseradish, butter. Trench fried sweet potatoes, new beans, tomatograpefruit and celery salad, cottage pudding with maple sauce, milk, coffee.

Flannel Is in Vogue

HV A FA Srrtire Hollywood, April io.— Flannel sports things of distinguished simplicity are Hollywood's favorite morning togs, when they don't wear pajamas. June Vlasek has a young looking green flannel one-piece dress, w-ith a round yoke of a slightly deeper green, and a high collar that fastens on one side with a metal button. Her beret is the lighter shade of green.

Genius in Glass Design Was This Famed German

BY MRS. C. O. ROBINSON In August, 1750,-the good ship Nancy brought to Philadelphia from Cologne, Germany, Heindrich Wilhelm Stiegel, destined to be one of the most important glass manufacturers in America. Philadelphia was at that time the leading shipping center in the colonies, and Lancaster county had a large German population, so Pennsylvania was the logical place for this young man to seek his fortune. Stiegel’s life story has been elaborated with tradition and speculation, but many manuscripts in the Pennsylvania Historical Society collection tell of his activities. Shortly after his arrival, he married Elizabeth Huber and entered her father’s thriving iron business. As he prospered, he built his own furnace, which he called the Elizabeth furnace, in compliment to his wife. Here he perfected a tenplate stove that was not excelled for years. Stiegel was extremely elegant and extravagant in his "design for living" and became known as Baron Stiegel. although he did not claim a legal right to the title. On his artistically and elegantly designed stove plates w'as inscribed the jingle: Baron Stiegel Ist drr Mann Der die Oefen Giessen Kann, which Frederick Hunter humorously translated: Baron Stiegel is the core That can cast your Iron stove. This may have fostered the use of the title. tt tt tt STIEGEL began- to experiment with glass manufacture at Elizabeth furnace in 1763, and in 1789 built one of the first notable glass w'orks in America. The glass house w'as circular in form and large enough to allow a coach and four to enter and turn around. He brought skilled workmen from abroad and built around the glass house a town which he named Manheim. In extensive grounds near his factory, he erected a large mansion, with tapestried walls and a chapel. Hand-painted tiles from the fireplace still are owned by the Pennsylvania Historical Society. Skilled as a musician, Stiegel formed from among his workmen and orchestra w'hich gave concerts from a platform built on top of his house. Although he was ostentatious, there can be no doubt of his genius, as his glass is celebrated for its charm and artistry. Old advertisements tell of the diversity of the glass made at Manheim, which included ordinary bottles, household and chemist’s supplies, engraved and enameled fllintware, clear and colored flintw'are w'ith ribbed fluted or sunken panel designs. An expanded pattern mold flintware was made in Venetian Diamond. Daisy in Square, Four Diamond within a Diamond patterns, also wine and other drinking glass- | es. These were made in a variety of shapes and colors, and rich deep j blue was Stiegel's favorite. e e a WHILE doing some research for the Metropolitan Museum of New York, Fredrick Hunter found, near the ruins of the Manheim factory, a cobalt sunken panel vase. Because of its undoubted authenticity. it has served as a standard for judging other pieces attributed to Stiegel. Several distinguishing features identify his glass. It is exceptionally clear and flawless, has extremely fine texture, and a bell-like resonance. Its colors, deep and rich.

Spring Accessories Are Strikingly Different a a b b b a a b a bob Gloves Are Unusual in Matching Qualities; Purses Are Novel in Style

This is the fourth of a series of dailv articles describing smart Easter apparel for the whole family. MRS. JULIA BLANSHARD NEA Service Writer NiEW YORK. April 10.—Accessories are to the spring costume what sauce is for the goose. And they're so startling and different that they are bound to please the gander, whoever he may be! Gloves come first for unusualness. If you are wearing pique for revers, scarfs, hat trim, get white pique gloves, and get them in a size larger than usual. If red. white and blue striped gingham makes your gilet, then perhaps a pair of patriotically striped gloves go with it. Gloves obviously "go with” things this year, as never before. Hands and the insides of fingers often are of kid or washable doeskin, the rest may be anything from organdy to velvet. For evening, if you want to be 1933. your gloves should match the sprigged starched organdy or the plaid linen, or the brown net of

your dress. j Hats, of course, are a subject in themselves. But it is smart to have at least*one hat, gilet, purse and glove ensemble. They're tricky enough to be a positive cocktail. Purses that will carry your Easter contribution may match your coat, your hat, your boutonniere or your tucked calf oxfords. Monograms dot the scenery, and if you

June Vlasek

- ■ - can be distinguished by an expert | on die peculiarities. In the stemmed ware the foot is flat. The John Herron Art museum has a display of Stiegel, loaned by Mrs. J Louis H. Levy, which includes a swirl perfume bottle with a dainty stepper. Wine glasses with spiral decoration in color blown into the stem, and a sunken panel engraved flip glass. A bottle in enameled glass is decorated with an odd-look-ing little woman dressed in red and blue. r Stiegel’s poetic and religious tendencies were expressed in a gift of a church to the Lutheran congregation at Manheim. He asked in payment "one red rose to H. W. Stiegel and his heirs forever.” Each year on the second Sunday in June the chancel of the New Zion church is decorated w'ith red roses, in his memory. tt e u A LTHOUGH Stiegel's income from his glass business was 5,000 pounds a year, he failed in 1774 and was imprisoned for debt. Asa result, his glass factory came to an untimely end. He returned, on his release, to Elizabeth furnace, where he made cannon for the Revolutionary army. Later he taught school and music and died in 1785 a disappointed and frustrated genius. His place of burial is not knowm. Miss Anna Hasselman and the Frank Fishback family of this city have a Huber ancestry which joins with that of Elizabeth Huber, Stiegel's wife. Their family tradition says that he was a difficult husband, which is possible, considering his many eccentricities. Stiegel W'as an artist and w r as responsible for a distinguished product. The epic of his glass manufacture, which lasted only five years, was a brilliant page in the history of pre-Revolutionary crafts and the precious specimens of his artistry still in existence command impressive prices. Meridian Club Arranges for Easter Events Meridian Hills Country Club will hold open house from 4 to 6 Easter Sunday w’ith Mr. and Mrs. John Hutchings, general chairmen of the entertainment committee, in charge. Others in the receiving line w'iil be the committee members, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Thompson, Dr and Mrs. Louis Beiden, and Mr. and Mrs. Verne A. Trask. The children will be entertained with an Easter egg hunt at 2:30 next Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Malcolm Moore chairman, assisted by Mrs. Kenneth Yates and Mrs. Hulburt J. Smith. Tuesday, April 18. the ladies’ monthly luncheon bridge party w'iil be held with Mrs. Francis P. Huston as chairman. The supper bridge party of the club is scheduled for Saturday, April 22. Auxiliary to Elect The Woman's Auxiliary to the National Federation of Postoffice Clerks. Local 130, will elect delegates to attend state and national conventions at the business meeting at 1:30 Tuesday in the Fletcher Savings and Trust Company.

happen to have initials that can make a dot a bar, or any other figure so much the better. This spring monogram business is done in a big way—no hiding your initials—rather play them up , like the proverbial bushel basket. Envelope bags have the edge on j chic. Blue purses will abound this year, made out of anything you

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Prepare for Press Event at Butler Matrix Banquet to Draw Scores of Delegates From Over State. One hundred and seventy-five women students, faculty and alumnae of the Butler university chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalistic sorority, and representatives from chapters in the state, will attend the annual Matrix Table banquet Tuesday night on the Butler campus. Gossip concerning "eds” and "coeds” will be broadcast from the microphone at the main table, at which the fourteen members of the organization will be, seated. "Razz” on Program The night club theme will be carried out in the decorations, with the guests seated four to a small table. The members will wear tuxedos. Entertainment during the dinner will include music by Bud Myers orchestra, and a floor show. Misses Feraldine Kuntz and Josephine Syms will give solos; Misses Marietta Coval, Marjorie Wise, Betty Sue Wooling and Helen Bonnell w'iil present a dance speciality; and Miss Dorothy Dunkle will sing. Raze will follow the dinner. Name Honor Guests The Matrix Table is an annual banquet held by the organization and invitations are entended to the outstanding w'omen on the campus on the basis of their activities. Invitations were issued to forty-eight seniors, sixty-four juniors, fifteen sophomores and five post graduates. Honor guests will include Mesdames Walter Scott Athearn, James D. Putnam, Donald Hoover, Miss Martha Bebinger and Miss Florence Renn.

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- 5 20 9 tern No. Size Street City State Name

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SCHOOL FROCK Check this for school w'ear now' and for vacation later—in a gay red-and-white’ combination that will make you feel bright even Jhough studies are dull. Brand new' style points that make it "different” are the youthful bow at the collarless neckline, the triangular trimming-piece on the blouse, and the pointed seaming of the center section. You may add brief puff sleeves, if you really prefer. And just notice the tiny amount of material it takes to make it! Size 12 requires 1% yard 36-inch checked material, " s yard 36-inch plain. New spring fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern, 15 cents.

have in mind, from leather to chiffon. Blouses are the outstanding spring passion. You'll have to have at least three with every suit. You will have five, if you are smart. The blouse that ties under the chin is the one of the moment. Shirts in gingham striped silk, necktie silk, colored crepe and plaid taffeta make new suits sit up and demand attention to themselves. Short-sleeved blouses, handcolored, in fine batiste and in colored organdy are sweet. Pique and linen are the newest ones, in yellow, navy blue, red, practically any color you like. But remember your blouse must tie into a general scheme of accessories. Typical of the new ensemble note and illustrating new fabric uses is one group of accessories that features a jaunty little chapeau, a onebutton vest, a purse that fastens with the same pearl button as the gilet and gauntlet gloves of crinkly, squashy white lastex. Curiously, you wear this little

Manners and Morals —BY JANE JORDAN

Jane Jordan ha* helped other*. Why not you? Write your letter today and tell what your trouble is.

Dear Jane Jordan—My girl and I have been going together a year. She is almost 20 and I am past 22. We would like to get married, but since I am going to school half time and working half time, we hesitate. The company I work for is helping me through school and

I will have a full time job w'hen I finish, which will be within six months or so. The girl lives with her parents, and we w'ould have to live with them if w r e got married. The expense would be no greater for them, as I work for my meals and would pay them a little room rent as I am paying

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Jane Jordan

where I live now. The girl would be at home whether we married or not, so her expenses would be no greater. We have thought and thought, but are afraid that our decision might be influenced by our desire to belong to each other. What is your suggestion? GEORGE. Answer What you propose amounts to companionate marriage, the very mention of which stirs such a storm of protest w'henever it is mentioned. In companionate marriage the husband assumes no financial responsibility for the wife, w'ho is supported by her parents until the young husband finishes his schooling and gets a start in business. The success of companionate marriage presupposes sympathetic parents, a knowledge of birth control, and divorce by mutual consent in case the young partners discover that their attraction is not permanent. I am in sympathy w'ith the general idea which seems to solve the problem of physical necessity for the young without binding them to the choice of immature judgment, but I despair of its success in the present cultural setup. To begin with, what makes you think that the girl’s parents want to add a son-in-law' to the household, w'ho pays for nothing except the rent of a room in which to hold an amour with their daughter? They would have to be exceptionally broad-minded, generous parents to put up with such arrangement, and I doubt their ability to rise to the occasion. Don’t you? The second hitch in your plan is the possibility of children. Had you thought of that? The coming of a child for whom you would be unable to provide would detract from your prestige as a husband and lay a strain upon your love which wouldn’t do it any good. The illness and increased burdens of your wife, about w'hich you could do nothing, would incite the parents’ resentment. The third flaw is the impermanence of youthful attachments. Sometimes they last, it is true, but much oftener they do not. A young couple with no means and no home of their ow 7 n in w'hich to express their love, encounter difficulties which easily dismay them. Plunged too soon into heavy responsibilities, they become disheartened and discouraged. Love doesn’t have a fair chance for survival. Easy escape from youthful failure by w'ay of divorce is frowned upon because it strikes at the solidarity of marriage. The law won’t release you because you change your mind. You have to sin against it before it will dissolve your contract. In view of a/i these things, doesn’t it seem more advisable to you to postpone your marriage until you are able to assume its responsibilities?

Personals

Mrs. Kenneth Metcalf and two children of London will arrive this week to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Woods A. Caperton, 4830 North Meridian street, until the w’edding of Miss Mary Caperton to Richard M. Fairbanks Jr. on April 18. Mrs. Norman E. Isaacs, 3630 North Meridian street, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Ritz, of Milwaukee. Mrs. E. L. Baker and her daughter, Miss Martha Jane Baker, 5155 North Capitol avenue, left today for Washington where they will visit during Miss Baker’s spring vacation at De Pauw university. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Kaufman and Miss Lucy Kaufman, West Fifty-sixth street, are visiting in New York. Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Simmons, 525 Pow'ell place, spent the weekend in Terre Haute visiting Mrs. Simmons’ parents. Among students of De Pamv university who are spending spring vacations here with their parents are Misses Elizabeth Jean Martin, Vivian Claffey, Caroline Hitz, Jeanne Smith. Mary Jane Clippinger, Marjorie Holcomb, Elizabeth Carr, Jane How’e, Mary Louise Woodard and Bertha Louise Drane.

vest over a dark brown linen blouse that ties its own neck bow, and the suit that goes with it may be gray, tan. brown or mixed tweed. There is a novelty striped brown and white linen hanky hanging out of the purse. A whole story could be written on the decorative note of handkerchiefs this Easter. The boutonniers is checked taffeta, brown and white; the woven belt is striped. And the smart new tiepumps that go with it are suva and kidskin. The compact and brown and white bracelets ereof carved composition. Very different, yet smart as Easter should be, is another ensemble of accessories. The shirt is striped red, blue, and beige, the blue block-stitched calf bag has an enormous beige monogram; the blue kid gloves have brand new decorations. cuffs of taffeta, with beige organdy ruffled edges. The beige kidskin oxfords have the perforations and tucks besides, j The compact is the latest novelty, a lacquered ease with gilt edge. Next—Easter hat*.

Dear Jane Jordan—Do you ever feel blue, tired as can be. and wonder what's the use of it all? Well, that’s the mood I'm beginning to get, and I don't like it. Do you know of any one who would like to have a young man 22 year old who is willing to work for his room and board? I am tired of feeling unwanted. I would like to be somewhere so I could help people, and in return have a home. For a year now I have been broke and unable to find a job, though I’ve tried so hard. I have lived only through the help of friends. Now' they are no longer able to help. I would so like to feel that, after all, I am worth while to someone. ST. CLAIR STREET. Answer some of our readers may have something for this young man to do. Write to Jane Jordan, and she will 1 forward your letters. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a boy--24 years old. I am going with a j girl 21. She has a baby. I don’t j know that I love her with all my ; heart or not, but w-hen I am with her, I don't want to leave her. My mother and my father are old and dependent on me. My tw'o brothers are at home, but won’t help. I would be crazy to get married now. I am asking you or somebody what to do about it. WORRIED BROWN EYES. Answ-er—ln this period of the w-orld’s distress, almost everybody is carrying somebody else financially. Helpless parents can not be deserted, but those tw'o brothers of yours should do something if they can. Self-denial is essential for this period, and any girl worth loving knows this all too well. Since you are not sure yet that you love this girl with your w'hole heart, your enforced w'ait is the best thing that can happen to you both. Art Group to Hear Lecture on Decorating The first of a series of illustrated lectures for members cf the Art Association will begin at 11 Tuesday morning at the John Herron Art Institute and will be repeated at 8 Wednesday night. Miss Mary Margaret Miller W'iil present the first talk dealing with phases of home furnishing or decoration, “Historic Period Decoration.” The schedule for the other lectures in the series is as follows: April 18-19—“ Period Styles in Furniture,’’ Miss Miller. April 25-26—“ Color and Light in the Home,” Oakley Richey. May 2-3—" The Home Garden," Lawrence Sheridan. May 9-10—“ Treatment of Walls, Floors and Windows.” Mrs. George C. Calvert. May 16-17—“ Arrangement and Balance,” "Walter Mcßride. May 23-24—“New Accessories for a New Age,” Howard F. Foltz. BUTLER WOMAN TO HEAD KAPPA BETA Kappa Beta sorority named Mrs. Alfred T. Degroot, a professor in the Butler university college of education, as national president of the organization, at the national convention held Friday, Saturday and Sunday in Jordan hall. A tea given by the advisers of the group concluded the convention. Miss Lillian Kittle of Ohio State university was re-elected vice-presi-dent; Miss Helen McAnulty of the University of Nebraska, recording secretary, and Miss Evelyn Swartz of Purdue university, treasurer. Mrs. Degroot is an alumnae of the Butler chapter, which acted as host to the visiting delegates from seven chapters. MRS. HATFIELD Ts ELECTED BY CLUB Mrs. Frank D. Hatfield is the new president of the Indianapolis Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi, which chose officers for next year at a meeting Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Roy Lee Smith, Blue Ridge road. Other officers are Mrs. Leroy Flint, vice-president; Miss Fannie Miner, treasurer; Miss Bearice Burgan, recording secretary; Miss Maxine Rigsbee, corresponding secretary; Mrs. C. R. Hamilton, Panhellenic representative, and Mrs. George Elliott, publicity chairman. Labor to Be Topic The thirty-hour week will be discussed at a call meeting of the National Association of Working Women Tuesday night at the Washington, with guests including members of the Indianapolis Busiand Professional Women's Club, League of Women Voters and Federation of Clubs. Miss Merica Hoagland and Miss Ivona Shirley will lead the session. Society Will Meet Girls’ Friendly Society of Christ church will meet for a 6 o’clock \ dinner Tuesday night in the parish house. The Rev. E. Ainger Powell i will talk. Meeting Scheduled The next meeting of ,the Little Lambs club will be held at 9:30 Saturday night, April 15, at the Indianapolis Country club.

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New Automobiles Carry, Appeal for Women, Witli Greater Ease in Driving Beautiful Designs and Wide Range of Unusual Colors Shown; Ventilation System Is ‘Draftless. ’ BY HELEN LINDSAY 'C'ASE in driving, beauty of design, unusual colors, and anew "draftless” system of ventilation make the new automobiles more appealing than ever to women motorists. All cars made by General Motors are equipped this year with the new Fisher ventilation system. Each window is controlled individually by the person sitting by it. The windows, made of shatter-proof glass, are in two sections. One section rolls down in the old way, while the small glass piece at the front of the window' swings diagonally outward. When closed, these two sections fit tightly together. New upholstery is close-clipped mohair, whipcord, and, on the

higher priced cars, corded broadcloth. Buicks this year are equipped with an automatic clutch button, to relieve gear shifting in traffic. This same automatic clutch is available for a small additional charge on Oldsmobiles and other makes. A carrying compartment of generous dimensions in the dash of some of the new cars has a lock and key, making it available for carrying jewelry, important papers, and other valuables. a a a Starter Is on Dash ON Pontiacs and Buicks, the starter now’ is on the dash, instead of on the floor, with gasoline and oil gauges, speedometer and other indicators at the extreme left of the control board. One key is all that is necessary for the new' Buicks. Ignition and doors carry the same lock. Adjustable sun shades, which shield the driver from front and side glare, come as standard equip-

ment on many of the new cars. These may also be procured for the right side of the front seat. They can be pushed up against the top of the car when not in use. For the woman motorist w'ho is timid in driving alone, anew locking system has been arranged for Buicks. Pontiacs. and other wellknow'n makes of cars. A small button on each door locks the car against intrusion. There is no danger of locking the keys in the ca>- with this new arrangement, since the curb door automatically unlocks from the outside when the driver leaves, and must be locked with the key. Visibility has been increased this year in all car models. Tire side posts at the front of the car are extremely narrow, and the back window has been enlarged approximately six inches, allowing the driver and occupants of the car to see approaching traffic from all angles. Special Colors Available WHILE the more conservative models come in dark colors, except on special order, sport models of cars are developed in Blue Devil blue, Rockford brown, Elgin grey, Astoria grey, and other striking shades. One model of the Oldsmobile is in dusky brown, with a copper trim. No pin-stripe trimming is used on this model, the design of decoration being a mold of the copper color, with the back of the car completely plain. tt u Decorative Grills Included T'VECORATIVE grills come as standard equipment on the new cars. -L/ These give the car added length, and a "dressed up” appearance in front. An entirely different feature of the new Essex is the towel rack, w'ith paper towels, which is concealed under the control board. Towel3 can be secured for refills. The new five-passenger two-door sedan manufactured by Essex is knowm as the "Terraplane.” a tt Cut Rates for Fair Preview RAILROAD tickets, sold at the rate of 1 cent a mile, will be offered to patrons of the Monon Friday, from Indianapolis and other points to Chicago. A special preview of the Century of Progress display at the w'orld's fair can be gained by Indianapolis for $3.70 for the round trip. These tickets will be available for coach travel to and from Chicago on trains leaving Indianapolis Friday night, April 14, and returning from Chicago on Sunday night, April 16.

MISS HOLDERMAN IS MARRIED AT HOME

Mss Lillian Holderman became the bride of Dr. Bernard A. Martin of Indianapolis at noon Saturday at the home of her mother, Mrs. Laura J. Holderman, 1712 North Meridian street. The Rev. John McFall of Rushville officiated in the presence ot immediatee families and a few' friends. Guy Montani, harpist, played during the ceremony. A small informal reception at the Holderman home followed, with the couple leaving for a wedding trip. On their return they will be at home at 3540 North Pennsylvania street. Mrs. Martin attended the Frances Shimer school in Chicago.

Daily Recipe i SPANISH POT ROAST j U pounds chuck j 1 small bottle stuffed I olives j 1-b pound salt pork \ 2 cups tomatoes j 1 large onion I 2 teaspoons salt I Pepper Fat ' ! Make small slits on each • side of the meat with a sharp ! knife. Cut salt pork into j small strips and stuff holes : with these lardoons and the ! stuffed olives alternately. Slice | onion and fry in fat. Then i remove the onion and brow'n : the meat on all sides. Add j tomatoes, cover closely and j simmer until done. Strain and * thicken liquid for gravy. !

.'APRIL' 10,1938

Mrs. Lindsay

B FOLLOW THE FLIERS V oxvx \ V \ Cross the Atlantic where it's narrowest...as aviators do. Sail from Montreal or Quebec. Cut a full third from open ocean mileage ... and enjoy the glamorous St. Lawrence country. Accommodations? Empress of Britain for size-speed-SPACE. “Duchess” liners for luxury at low prices. Popular “Montships" for solid comfort. Spacious, attractive Tourist Class, also Third Class, on all ships. Ask about All-ExpenseTours. Sail now to Europe ... where current exchange rates make dollars bigger. From Montreal and Quebec (trains to ship-side at Quebec). Get travtl-timt map and literature from your own agent, or P. G. Jefferson. T. P. A., 430 Merchants Bank Bldg., Indianapolis, Indiana. CANADIAN PACIFIC ST. LAWRENCE SEAWAY •