Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1933 — Page 11
APRIL 28, 1933
Party Will Entertain Bride-Elect Plainfield Girl Will Be Guest at Home of Mary Ogle. Mrs. Horace Storer of Plainfield v. ill entertain with a bridal party tonight at the home of Mrs. Elbert Storer, 915 East Maple road, in honor of Miss Mary Frances Ogle, whose marriage to Dr. Ernest Henry Warnock will take place next month. Mrs. Storer will be assisted by her mother, Mrs. S. G. Kreider of Plainfield. Favors will be Premier roses, tied to tallies. The serving tables will be centered with bowls of Premier rases and delphiniums. Guests with Miss Ogle and her mother, Mrs. Albert A. Ogle, will include Mesdames Noble Ropkey, Lewis O Ward, Robert Schetter, Robert Nipper, W. H. Bockstahlcr, Robert Garten, Scott Waldon, Granston Mugg, Dana Chandler, Bert Arnold. E. U. Paulev, Charles Harrison, B. E. Lacey, Edward Kirkpatrick, Forrest Green. Paul Morton of Lebanon and Willis Jackman of Peoria. 111., and Misses Maurine and Francis Jaquith. Kathryn Holaday, Margaret Thompson and Armen Ashjian. W. C. T. U. Notes Irvington Union will hold the regular meeting at 2 Wednesday, with Mrs. Rhoda Cunningham, 60 North Audubon road, as hostess. Mrs Lelia Hadley will have charge of the devotions. The child welfare department work will be presented by Mrs. Martha Gripe. Mrs. Clayton Ridge of the federation of parent teachers will speak on "Wise use of Leisure Time." Misses Alice Adelia Hite and Betty Howard will give readings. Miss Irene Trueblood, president, will preside. The Carrie Ross Union will meet with Mrs. Catherine Davidson, 871 West Twenty-fifth street, at 8 Friday. Devotions will be in charge of Mrs. Irene Moore. Guest speaker will be Frank Beckwith. Mrs. Davidson will preside. Vegetables—To Match! There are certain vegetable rules to follow when serving different kinds of meat. Peas with lamb: potatoes with beef; string beans with pork. Os course, you may serve other vegetables, too, but these are considered best both by dietitians and etiquette experts. Iron Out Spots Grease spots can be removed ffom clothes if you work patiently and with a great deal of care. Place a clean blotter under the spot and another clean one on top of the place where the spot is. Now put a warm (not hot) iron on the upper blotter and gently move it back and forth until the grease disappears.
Your Manners HOW can I politely .stick to my teetotalism, which far antedates prohibition and repeal arguments? People insist on pouring 3.2 into a glass before me. —K. T. Since your distaste for liquor of any sort is a personal, long felt attitude, why lock horns over it? Let them pour as much as they like into your glass—but don’t drink it, or argue against it. That way, you both win on a draw.
■ MB mi Mpaij \. the Purchase xfl& I I COATS, i:4 n 0 | C S "Gi 'JHjgSi jJHB offer’ Choose a coat / . I iT §f\\ *A % XH\ ®r "hoes for only Si. I / ' J f Hi M||mH The coats featuml A j ■ / ! ! ■KjHG 9Sk| include models j J PAY i'i~ A lifßKlf 9<“ ! ' l { QHLY*X A WBEIV |£ k o£X j 127 W. WASHINGTON STREET asgga jj
Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis. Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- r o t r tern No. *2 & 1 4 Size Street City State Name
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SLENDERIZING STYLE Ever since the demise of the late and unlamented flapper fashions, styles have been growing more and more feminine. You’ll notice, too, that fashionable figures become, each year, more curved and more womanly. The flat-busted, hipless young girl’s figure is no longer smart. Instead, the full curving woman’s figure has become the chic ideal. So, if you have the mature figure, you may rejoice. Fashions, today, are designed for you. The frock sketched, for instance, has lines that take kindly to the curves of the larger figure. In fact, the proportions of this frock are decidedly slenderizing. And it’s smart, and Easy-to-Make, in flowerprinted voile. Size 16 requires 9% yards 39-inch material. Width about 3 s s yards. New summer fashion book is out! Send for it—put check here □ and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 16 cents. Shoes Are Checked Checkered shoes are anew note to give a fashionable fillip to spring costumes. Jenny, style authority, shows them with plain kid toes and checkered wool back sections. A blue and white checkered wool frock worn with a three-quarter length coat of navy blue wool Is accompanied by blue kid shoes having back sections oi the checkered wool. Blue kid gloves cuffed with the same check complete the costume.
Box Parties Listed for Guild Ball Civic Actors’ Event to Be Saturday Night in Athenaeum. Additional box parties are being j arranged for the county fair ball j Saturday night at the Athenaeum j to be held under the auspices of the ' Actors and Works Guild of the Civic theater. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Ruckelshaus will have in their party Messrs, and Mesdames Thomas R. Kackley, Wayne Kinnaird. Joseph Cain and Conrad Ruckelshaus. Guests in the box with Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Eaglesfield will be Miss Clara Guthrie of Richmond, Va.; Misses Sarah and Eldena Lauter, Dr. A. F. Weyerbacher, Jack Storey and Robert Davy Eaglesfield Jr. Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Lesh will be entertained at a buffet supper preceding the ball at the Lesh home in Brendenwood. They are Messrs, and Mesdames Frank Hoke, Clayton Moag. William H. Mooney, Orland A. Church, T. A. W. Gilliam, Misses Ellen Lee and Dorothy McGuire, Scott Clifford and Captain William Leitch of Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Miss Helen Coffey will entertain a group of friends Saturday night: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fieber, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Todd, Miss Maja Brownlee, Dean Brossman and Homer Porter. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wilson are arranging a party of twelve. FRATERNITY DANCE WILL BE SATURDAY John E. Scott is chairman of Ihe committee arranging a dance to be held Saturday night by the Beta graduate chapter of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. , Active members from chapters at Indiana. De Pauw, and Purdue universities and Wabash and Hanover colleges will be guests at the informal affair to be held at the Spink Arms. Patrons and patronesses will in- | elude Messrs, and Mesdames Heber D. Williams, John P. Collett, Clifford G. Dunphv, Charles H. Smith | and James B. Brill. Other mcm- | bers of the arrangements committee are James S. Kennon, Robert Win- ! stead, and Walter Reed. Sororities Pledges of the lota Tau sorority will entertain members at a bridge ! party tonight at the home of Miss Ella Hansen, 8944 North Capitol avenue. Miss Mildred Milligan wall be hostess, assisted by Miss Ernestine Bradfield. Personals Dr. Carl B. Sputh will return Monday from Louisville where he is visiting. Misses Virginia and Charlotte Cox, 3002 Fall Creek boulevard, arrived in Baltimore Wednesday from a trip to Havre and Hamburg. Miss Phyllis Cofield of Rushville will be the week-end guest of Miss Maxine Rigsbee, 4002 North New Jersey street. She will attend the Founder's day celebration of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Dinner to Be Served April committee of Holy Name church of Beech Grove will serve i dinner from 12 to 2 and from 5 to 7 ! Sunday in the church hall. Cards will be played at 2:30 and 8. Mrs. t Harry Cook is chairman.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HONOR GUEST
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Mrs. John W. Pease Mrs. John W. Pease will be honor guest at the 17th annual state day celebration to be observed by the Delta Zeta sorority Saturday at the Columbia club. Mrs. Pease is the national editor of The Lamp, sorority magazine.
Card Parties
Indianapolis O. E. S., auxiliary 393 will sponsor a bridge and euchre party at the Masonic hall, 1522 West Morris street, at 8 Saturday. Mrs. Margaret Barrett, 426 .North Beville, will be hostess for a card party to be given tonight by the Ladies of the L. A., A. O. H„ 5. Miss Kathleen Barrett and the club officers will assist the hostess. J. O. U. A. M. will give a card party at 8:30 tonight at the Bttschmannn hall, Eleventh street and College avenue. PLAY TO BE GIVEN BY CHURCH GROUP “The Red Headed Stepchild" will be presented by the Young Peoples’ club of the St. Roch’s church at 3 and 8 Sunday in the church hall, 3600 South Meridian street. Members of the cast are Misses Elizabeth Buergler, Loretta Eck, Eleanor Johantgen, Irene Kress, Josephine Robertson. Frances Snyder, Ruth Snyder, Mary Ward, and Anthony Hoeping, Joseph Teipen, Albert Thuer and Albert Huck.
FREE Saturday and Monday H Saturday and Monday you will be given this full-sized porch m . -_ glider with any purchase of SSO or more. It seats 5 people, but- 1 ton tufted with removable seat and back, guaranteed fully. CARRYING J3HARGE Here they are, the season’s latest. s**t Dining Room Suites in solid oak. walnut and combination Upholstered in your choice of mohairs, mm <*., p, woods. Prices range from $49 to S3OO. A mm velours and tapestries with prices ranging /K Mmk from $49 to S4OO. Remember, with any \Mm Hi Ba 10-Tube (hpA SSO or more, and remember, we refund your V jgm suite costing SSO or more, you $e R •• !hrjH money if you can buy elsewhere $5 will receive the PORCH GLID- m. M KaQl ° •*• ZT for less. nnlu/M Ay# ER FREE. DOWN B $6 Down DOWN ■ ~7WMW~ r^T 1 Trade-In Your Old ;i *J MAI 1 KLa5) ; jd*. \xMqm if 0 0 171 IDU < Regardless of its age or condition, we shall i Wm pay you $5 for your old mattress when traded i jjPHfc . ySjJL-xJ| f Innersnrimr Mattress IQ 4 *tf" £ wisJL HHI pHilfej | For Appraisal on Any old ;i | iHllls|lllllg Mdurest | j Pieces of Furniture You ;! j! . psi FOR YOUR OLD By Mail or Call Lincoln 7326 I*o^ o[lts RUG _i; I Please s^ your to give me s is traded in on any 9x12 rug in our stock. ;j " > !; $ Fifty Bedroom Suites on our samDle ! Address Phone 1; “1 FT kA And floor, from the best manufacturers in the /f% £W %j| „„ > I / *°" r country. We guarantee our prices to be \ JV AJH !■ When do you want representative to call? \ "" X 9 - 0 Ku * > the lowest. If you don’t shop tj> $2 Down here before buying, you may n m M not get your money’s worth LMJWIN HBHI ■* Interest ll|\|\g"|% tes) i™™(A) rof^^-J'UUrll lIVUI/I rwlrb DELIVERY _ B,a,a# L>— j | |ILL IN INDIANA
Reception to Be Given for State Artists Twenty artists who will represent Indiana at the Century of Progress in Chicago will be honored at a reception from 4 to 5 Sunday in the John Herron Art institute. Mrs. Paul V. McNutt, chairman of Indiana social activities: Miss Lucy Taggart and Mrs. H. B. Burnett will be hostesses. Other members of the committee include Messrs, and Mesdames Evans Woollen, E. L. Barker oi Thorntown; Wilbur D. Peat, Richard Lieber. Harry E. Taylor, James W. Fesler and Frank C. Ball of Muncie; Perry McCart of West Baden: Chalmer Schaefer of Leesburg; E. C. Atkins and Frank C Dailey. Mesdames J. Otis Adams. T. C.
S)P STRAPS! Just arrived! The newest | thing in fashionable footwear! Styled like much higher- — _______ priced shoes. Almost unbe- A S3 lievable quality at BURT’S f Value shoes ' . n P a* 35 EAST WASHINGTON ST. Mg - M . Former I’ettis (New York Store) Locution " * " ' or **** Cash Mail Orders Filled..: Add 154
Steele of Bloomington: William Forsyth. Adah O. Frost. C. B. King of Chicago; Maude Bruce of Anderson: L. W. Hockett of Ft. Wayne: Etwin Miller of Anderson: Hamel D. Hinkle of Vincennes: Edwin N. Canj ine of Terre Haute, and J. T. ■ Wheeler. Dr. and Mrs. Merrill Davis of Marion: Messrs. J. I. Holcomb. W. H. O'Brien of Lawrenceburg: Wil- | liam Alpen of Valparaiso; Charles O. Grafton of Muncie. and A. Murray Turner of Hammond. Arrange Supper Ladies’ Aid Society of the Speedway M. E. church will give a supper at 5:30 Saturday night in the church building, Sixteenth and Medford streets. Roman Stripes Roman stripe ribbon is staging a comeback, and it is a big comeback, for some of it is a foot wide. It goes into bows, scarfs, sashes, and trimming.
Beer Lunches Arranged to Tickle Palate “With sherry in the lobster Newburg; beer in the cheese dishes and a stein on the table, the depression is over. Intriguing, inexpensive, clubby little get-togethers are again possible," states F. H. Beach in the preface to his new cookbook. “3 Point 2.’’ The book is designed and decorated to represent a beer keg. staves and all. Beer is supposed to be served with all the dishes. Here are some of the recipes: ENGLISH MONKEY Heat half a cup of diced cheese with a piece of butter the size of an egg. then stir in a cup of milk. Cook five minutes. Add a beaten egg. a dash of red pepper and half
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a teaspoon salt. Cook another five minutes. Serve on crackers or toast. Two portions. CHEESE SOUFFLE ' pound srsted 3 tablespoons flour. cheese. ’a teaspoon salt. 1 cup scalded milk. >* teaspoon pepper. 3 tablespoons butter. 4 esas. Beat the egg yolks and whites separately. Mawe a white sauce of the milk, butter, flour and egg yolks. Add the grated cheese Let it cool, then fold in the stiffly • beaten whites. Put into a buttered baking dish, place the dish in a hot oven and bake for ten or fifteen minutes. Two portions. PERMANENTS gSg The Hrnntiful Nii-Tmu'B 4|gH \\;ne. t omplrte itli H bhtmpoo. >elf- j Setting Hw BEAUTE ARTES fill ROOSEVELT HI DO. Fox Scarfs Silvers, Cross, Whites, Blues and Red Foxes REDUCED TO y 2 PRICE Fur Lapin Jackets Complete Stock CHOICE S'! 5-00 i'T t 'o I HUME-MANSUR BLDG. | 29 E. Ohio St. Est. 1895 I
