Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 3, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 May 1933 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Crafts Are Hobby for City Family 3 Generations Practice Carving, Modeling, and Music. BY BEATRICE BCRGAN Time* Woman'* Pa*e Editor * The world is *o full of a number of thins* I m sure we should all be a* happy a* kins*.” THREE generations of Mary Catherine Stair's family have heeded Stevenson's admonition. They are making their world full by creating any number of things with their hands. Mary Catherine is only 13, but her nimble fingers strum over the strings of her harp with mature dexterity. As she practices in

preparation for a performance, her grandfather, D. M. Karns, probably is in the basement carving wood or painting a picture, and her mother, Mrs. Clem Stair, in the sun room creating somet hi n g from a “scrap.” “We like to be busy and our hands seem to be the medium for making our imaginations articu-

Miss Burgan

late,” Mrs. Stair explained. "My father was a marble cutter by profession. When the mechanical drills did away with handwork, he sought other ways to use his hands.” He sketched, carved wood, and just this spring at the age of 81, completed his first oil painting. Mrs. Stair inherited her father’s inclination, and as a child made dolls of scraps as an outlet for her desire to make something. Mishap Paves the Way A mishap started Mrs. Stair’s most accomplished workmanship. A clay composition plaster failed to adhere to the sleeping porch walls. The bits which peeled off seemed pliable, and \yith a little experimentation she modeled wee figures. Remembering the Mexican art of modeling pictures in English walnut shells, she tried her hand. She reproduced historical scenes, interiors, landscapes, animal and character studies. Her conceptions, reduced to the scale of a foot to a thirty-sec-ond or sixty-fourth of an inch, are striking with their minute detail.

Figures Are Painted In one scene, a shepherd boy plays a flute to his two pet sheep. In another, a brown dog stretches before a glowing fire in a fireplace, with candlestick and clock. Beside the easy chair and footstool is a tip-top table with a vase holding a bouquet. Mrs. Stair fashions her figures with her fingers and an ordinary silver nutpick. With a paint brush she adds the native color of her subjects. At a recent doll show at Tabernacle Presbyterian church, she modeled a tiny doll and placed it in a homely scene in a nutshell. She sent Lindbergh a conception of his flight across the Atlantic, and received an acknowledgement of appreciation. Proficient at Harp Mary Catherine shares her mothers interest in handcraft, and her school projects show distinct originality. She entertains at school affairs with harp selections. Today, she was to appear before the Propylaeum Club at its annual meeting. Mary Catherine pridefully pointed out the violins, which her grandfather made. "He can play them, too," she* said. Mary Catherine frequently gives talks on the evolution of the harp, which she illustrates with lantern slides of drawings made by her mother. STATE OFFICIALS TO BE DANCE GUESTS Honor guests at the May dance to bo held by the State House Girls’ Democratic Club Friday night, May 26 at the iLncoln will be Governor and Mrs. Paul V. McNutt, and Messrs and Mesdames Pleas E. Greenlee, Floyd Wiliamson and Earl Peters. Miss Sally Sawyer is president of the club and Miss Dorothea Shickel, chairman of the dance. Others on the arrangements are Misses Ora D. Gilliatte, Helen Barrett and Martha Crist. blue File group TO HONOR GUESTS Mrs. A. F. J Baur, 444 West Maple Road, will be hostess for the guest day to be held Wednesday by the Blue Nile chapter of the International Travel Study Club. Mrs Charles Richards will assist. Mrs. David H. Edwards will talk on “The London the Tourist Doesn’t Know,” and Mrs. Frank Forry will read a history of the Blue Nile chapter. Honor guests will be Mrs. Burt Kimmel, Mrs. John Thoinberg and Mrs. Samuel Artman. Meeting Postponed Beta chapter of the Parental Society of America has postponed its meeting, scheduled for next Monday at the Fletcher American bank, until May 22. Frolic Is Saturday The Little Lambs club will hold its next frolic Saturday night at the Indianapolis Country club.

A Day’s Menu Dinner — Cereal cooked with dates, cream, frizzled dried beef, toasted muffins, marmalade, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Split pea soup, toasted crackers, fruit salad, steamed brown bread, milk. tea. Breakfast — Ham loaf with browned pineapples slices, potatoes In cheese sauce, buttered spinach, jellied eeiery salad. date custard pie, milk, coffee.

Flower Into Print a a a u a a White Accessories Top Off Smart Costume

rMELD flower printed frocks, Jr with white accessories, will usher in summer with real grace. This short-sleeved frock with |k|j|||p|t simple low Ascot tie neckline is \ an imported crepe, in tiny allover field flower desien in yellow. green and rose, against a white The purse and one-eyelet classic tie are of white kid. the gloves . :• * : are fabric gauntlets and the hat a i ‘All v*\ f?> \\ ' Wffl white peanut panama, banded in i . : ast and a ’ ,:\ ’ ' *, * -.., ./,'**** si % ■ ; ,0.

Musical Program to Be Given Saturday by Propylaeum Club

Mrs. A. Dryden Eberhart, lyric soprano and Charles Lurvey, pianist will present a program at 2:30 Saturday before the Propylaeum club. Each member will bring guests. Assistants for the entertainment include: Mesdames Leoti T. Trook, Delos A. Alig, C. J. Roach. E. C. Barrett, Educator to Be Guest of Altrusa Club Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse, personal director of women’s college, University of North Carolina, will be gi*"st speaker at the dinner meeting of the Altrusa Club Saturday night at the Columbia Club. Miss Charlotte Carter is chairman of the affair, being sponsored by the club’s national policy committee. DeWitt S. Morgan, principal of Arsenal Technical high school, and Misses Olive R. Beckington, Louise Braxton, Sara Ewing and Hazel Howe, teachers of freshman girls’ civic classes at Technical, will be special guests. Each week a member of the Altrusa Club speaks before the freshman girls’ civic classes on her work or profession. Deans of all city high schools and all faculty members interested in vocational guidance are invited to attend. Invitations are extended to the presidents of Woman's Rotary Club. Zonta Club and the Indianapolis Business and Professional Women's Club, and to Altrusa clubs in neighboring cities.

RECEPTION'TO BE GIVEN PARENTS

Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Humphreys and Miss Helen Humphreys will entertain at their home, 31 West Thirty-third street, Tuesday, in honor of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Humphreys. who will celebrate their golden wedding anniversary. The reception will be held from 3 to 5 and from 8 to 10. There are no invitations. Assisting will be Mesdames Ambrose J. Dunkle, Fred Wilis, Emma Barnes, Lennie Hiatt, C. A. Ryker. Harry Wade, Don Herr, J. M. Herr and Misses Betty Humphreys, Jessie Denny and Portia Pittenger. Appointments will be carried out in gold. Johanna hill roses, yellow snap dragons and daisies will center the table which will be lighted with gold tapers. AUXILIARY GROUPS FOR YEAR CHOSEN Mrs. Edith Nelson, president of the McKinley club auxiliary, will be assisted by the following committee chairmen during the ensuing year: Mrs. Mabel Annis, ways and means; Mi's, Mayme Armstrong, program; Mrs. Florence Wilson, publicity; Mrs. Pansy Beem. telephone; Mrs. Jessie Prange, membership; Mrs. Anne Trimble, hostess; and Mrs. W. G. McKinney, sick. The group will hold a public supper Friday night in the club rooms, 2217 East Michigan street. Mothers Are Dined Miss Margaret Rohr was toastmaster at the mother and daughter dinner held Saturday at the Little Flovfer church. The program included a song by Misses Eleanor Sweeney and Frances Anderson, dances by Misses Lucille Fox and Eleanor Wheeler, readings by Misses Margaret Menefee and Betty Ilindel. and accordion solo by Miss Margaret Barragry. Miss Marie Parks was accompanist. Luncheon is Tuesday Decorating committee of the women’s auxiliary to Sahara Grotto will hold a monthly luncheon meeting Tuesday in the Grotto home. Mrs. Leslie Boyden will be hostess. Announce Engagement The engagement of Miss Sara Tyce Adams to Arthur Cotter Shea, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Shea, has been announced by her mother, Mrs. Reily C. Adams*. The wedding wiii,take place in September.

FIELD flower printed frocks, with white accessories, will usher in summer with real grace. This short-sleeved frock with simple low Ascot tie neckline is an imported crepe, in tiny allover field flower design in yellow, green and rose, against a white background. The purse and one-eyelet classic tie are of white kid, the gloves are fabric gauntlets and the hat a white peanut panama, banded in black velvet for contrast and a soft touch.

James E. Roberts, Charles O. Roemler, Oscar Baur. Preston C. Rubush, W. W. Knight, W. N. Wishard, Charles Latham, A. P. Conklin, Herbert S. Wood, Frank Shellhouse, Henry R. Danner. Burke G. Slaymaker, Oliver P. Ensley, Thomas A. Wynne, Charles Mayer, Sr., Warren G. Fairbanks, Blaine H. Miller, Russell Sullivan. Ferris Taylor, Woodbury T. Mooris, Myron Green, Quincey Myers, Henry J. McCoy and C. C. Perry. Others assisting will be Mesdames Nicholas H. Noyes, Roy A. Hunt, A. A. Wilkinson, Oscar A. Jose, Jr., Henry Kahn. H. R. Wilson, Bernays Kennedy, Edna S. Severin, Louis Burckhardt, William J. Shafer. Eli Lilly, J. J. Daniels, H. E. Woodbury,, Charles J. Lynn, A. Kiefer Mayer, Albert P. Smith, Olive D. Edwards, S. H. Smith, Irving M. Fauvre, John P. Frenzel, Jr., Walter J. Goodall, Deborah Moore, William J. Taylor, Maurice Tennant, Walter S. Greenough, William L. Taylor, Ross H. Wallace and Miss Julia Brinks. Convention of Travelers to Open Thursday Program for the three-day convention of the ladies’ auxiliaryy to the United Commercial Travelers, which will open Thursday, includes several social events as well as business sessions. A reception in the afternoon at the Lincoln and a theater party at the Indiana at night will compose Thursday’s entertainment. The grand auxiliary will convene at 8:30 Friday morning, with Mrs. H. E. Voight of South Bend, grand president in charge. At noon the delegation will go by chartered bps to Avalon Country Club for a luncheon, musicale and bridge party. A ball will be held Friday night in the Travertine room of the Lincoln. A tour of the shopping district wall be made Saturday morning. Women whose husbands, brothers, fathers or sons are members of the United Commercial Travelers are eligible to attend the sessions when registered.

Personals

Mrs. Max Lechner, who has spent the past year in New York, has returned to take up permanent residence in Indianapolis with Miss Rose Piccard, 1409 North Delaware street. Mrs. T. D. Kemp of Charlotte. N. C.. is the guest of Mrs. Rivers Peterson, 5216 Central avenue. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Lilly Jr„ 4050 Washington boulevard, are visiting in New York. Miss Thelma Dinkins, 3059 North Illinois street, is a guest at the Barbizon Plaza in New York. HOSPITAL HEAD TO ADDRESS MOTHERS “Adventures of Living” wall be discussed by Dr. John G. Benson, superintendent of the Methodist hospital, at the meeting to be ’held Wednesday night in the auditorium of the American Central Life Insurance Company. This is the second meeting to be held by the Mother's Club council of the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society. Miss Grace L. Brown is in charge of the meeting. A quartet of the Sigma Alpha lota musical sorority will present a group of musical selections. JOAN FREEMAN IS BRIDE OF MONTH Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Freeman. 144 Berkley road, have announced the marriage of their daughter, Miss Joan Freeman, to Thomas H. Arnold, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Arnold, of Peru. The wedding took place Friday. The bride attended Butler university and is a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Arnold is a graduate of Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold will be at home after June 1 at 3778 Salem street.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Weddings of 2 City Girls Solemnized Misses Kiger and Karle Brides in Sunday Ceremonies. Two charming weddings were solemnized Sunday when Miss Mary Kathryn Kiger became the bride of Stephen Hadley and Miss Josephine Carolina Karle was married to Andrew Brown Bicket. The marriage of Miss Kiger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Kiger, 4414 North Meridian street, took place at 4 at the Broadway M. E. Church, with the Rev. Richard Millard officiating. The church was decorated with greenery, white cathedral candles, and the pews tied with white satin ribbon. Misses Louise Niven and Jane Brady, bridesmaids, wore peach and green net dresses fashioned with taffeta bustles and a short train. Their hats were of net with a small brim and they carried muffs of yellow and purple pansies. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, was gowned in white satin and lace with a net veil caught at the sides with gardenias. Her shower bouquet was ! white roses, lilies of the valley and gardenias. Reception Is at Home Paul Whitehouse of Bluffton was best man. Ushers were Messrs. William Kiger. brother of the bride. | Norman Hanna, George Horst and William Hoffman, Mrs. Kiger wore green flowered j crepe with black accessories with a shoulder corsage of gardenias. Mrs. Hedley wore black lace with a corsage of Johanna Hill roses. A reception for immediate families and friends was held at the Kiger home. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Evans of Crawfordsville, Mr, and Mrs. A. J. Brady and Mr. and Mrs. D A. Earnart of Marion and Mr and Mrs. F. A. Canada and Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Canada of Winchester. The couple left on a wedding trip, the bride traveling in a brown suit with brown accessories. The at-home address is for 227 East Sixty-second street after May 21. Rites at Athenaeum Miss Karle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Christian J. Karle became the bride of Mr. Bicket, son of Mrs. Matilda Bicket of Brooklyn, N. Y., in a ceremony in the palm garden of the Athenaeum. The Rev. Lewis E. Brown read the ceremony before an altar of palms, banked with ferns and lighted with cathedral candles. Guy Montani, harpist, played bridal airs preceding the ceremony, and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life” during the ceremony. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a crinoline gown of point de sprit, combined with a sash of cire satin. She wore a hat of white velvet flowers with a short veil, and a pair of gold mesh bracelets belonging to her grandmother. Her flowers were bride’s roses and lilies of the valley. Sister Only Attendant Miss Louise Karle, sister, and only attendant of the bride, was dressed in apricot organdie with green organdie hat and accessories and carried a shower bouquet of talisman roses. Wiliam J. Quest of Louisville was best man. Mrs. Karle wore white honeycomb lace and a corsage of American beauty roses. A reception was held at the Athenaeum, following the ceremony. Out-of town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Elmer O. Mattocks and Miss Virginia Balay of Cleveland; Miss Catherine E. Wolf of Elkhart; Walter Hunt, Robert Hunt and Roger•Lauffer of Louisville; Walter Stotts Jr. of Brooklyn, N. Y.; Ricardo Llop of Ithaca, N. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. Carl G. Bjorkman and C. W. Stiegelmeyer of Chicago. The bride attended the University of Alabama and Mr. Bicket attended Duke and Cornell universities, where he was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity. STYLE SHOW TO BE HELD AT ACADEMY Misses Mary Hussey is general chairman of the style show and tea to be held by the graduates of Saint John's Academy at the hall Saturday. Miss Helen Ready is in charge of the fashion exhibit being held under the direction of the William H. Block Company. Committee chairmen include Miss Mildred Hohman, refreshments; Miss Jeannet O’Donnell, reception, and Miss Mary Louise Walpole, arrangements. Banquet Is Tuesday Annual mother and daughter banquet will be held by the Philathea class at 6:30 Tuesday night at the ; church, Pleasant and Shelby streets, i Miss Helen Holtsclaw will give the toast to the mothers and the Rev. E. Emery will talk on “Mothers and | Daughters of Africa.”

Daily Recipe SWEDISH MEAT BALLS t pound ground beef 1 cup bread crumbs 1 egg, slightly beaten 1-2 cup or more of stock or milk 1 teaspoon salt 1-1* teaspoon pepper l tablespoon minced onion. I-2 teaspoon m inced pa rsley Combine thoroughly, using enough of the liquid to make the meat of the right consistency to shape. Make into balls about l l - inches thick. Brown on all sides in fat from pork drippings. Remove the balls and make a gravy of the fat in the pan by adding 2 teaspoons of flour and x, cup of stock. Add the balls to this gravy and let them simmer slowly for 45 minutes to an hour. Serve in gravy.

Manners and Morals BY JANE JORDAN

Ak Jane Jordan to help too in making ronr most difficult decisions. She will stnd Tour problem and answer yonr questions in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—Recently I met a man 42 years old. I am 38, and have been married. He never has. He treated me lovely at first, but got very bossy and fault-find-ing. At times he really was mean, very jealous, and threatened me. Although he made splendid money, he was very close with it. He grumbled about never having enough to go anywhere and said he was in debt so much that he never would get out. He refused, however, to tell me what for. This man asked me to marry him, but I was afraid to. Now he is running after my folks, buying them off with flowers, candies, etc. They think he's great and feel I'm to blame. He drinks, and that's when he is mean. He has squeezed my wrists until I couldn’t move. I think I see a very unhappy life ahead with this man, so I have turned him down, but he still watches me. Have I done the wrong or right thing in quitting. Sorta miss, him, too. PUZZLED ANN. Answer—You are 100 per cent right, Ann. You miss his attentions and the drama of his perverse behavior. Sometimes I think a woman rather would be mistreated than ignored, and that she can put up with unhappi-

ness better than monotony. But for heaven's sake, don’t let loneliness tempt you to marry a man with whom your good sense repdiates. Here is why he would make a bad husb an and. He drinks, and when the restraint of his conscious personality is removed. cruel tendencies are re-

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Jane Jordan

leased like beasts from their cages. His desire to ejoy hurting verges on the pathological. Why should you be his victim? His parsimony also is a disagreeable trait. It is impossible !,o live happily with a person who is haunted by the fear of letting go of what he possesses, even for essentials of life. Add to this another unbearable trait, fault finding, and you hardly could achieve a combination more productive of misery. A person so poor in personal charm that he is obliged to buy the favor of the people he wants to win is to be pitied. Even with his penchant for parsimony, he’d rather bestow gifts than make an effort to win out on his own merits. Beware of a man whose tendency is to keep others dependent on his pleasure. l T e is a trouble maker, and no ore will find contentment in his presence. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l have a dear friend whose husband always has been ideal. He spends almost every night with her and the children. One night this couple was shopping in a busy part of the city, when all at once the wife heard a woman’s voice speaking to her husband. He said, “I don’t know you.” The wife spoke up and asked, “Who are you!” She gave her name and said she worked in the same office building, then walked away in a hurry. The wife said she was sick about it. If he had been guilty, I should

Patterns Pattern Department, Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Ind. Enclose find 15 cents for which send Pat- e n 1 n tern No. DU 1 U Size Street City State Name

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EVENING JACKET Brevity's the word for the new evening jackets that find their way into every’ wardrobe, no matter how limited. Women are keen on their practicality as well as their chic—their efficient way of transforming a formal gown into an informal dinner or Sunday night frock. But they must be short, and they’re smartest when they look like an integral part of the dress they're worn with. The model sketched is of paramount fashion interest because of its criss-cross closing, its extended shoulders and flattering puff sleeves. You may make it in black or white taffeta or chiffon and wear it with several frocks. For a springlike touch, a corsage of gay flowers at the point of closing is very’ smart. Size 16 requires 2 1 * yards 36-inch material. Pattern No. 5010 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 32, 34, 36. 38 bust. New summer fashion book is out! .Send for it—put check here Q and enclose 10 cents extra for book. Price for pattern 15 cents.-

think he could have introduced his wife and passed it off. She has the feeling that there was something between her husband and this woman. She said her husband made good money, yet she saw very little of it. I think he was guilty, but was not quick enough to give a clever answer instead of claiming he never knew the woman. A. A. Answer—Always believe in a man's innocence until he is proved guilty. Nothing is more baffling than circumstantial evidence, and nothing is more misleading. That is why no just law will convict a person on nothing but circumstantial evidence. I think this wife is being very silly in building up a case against a perfectly satisfactory husband upon such an unimpressive incident. It might have happened to any one. ana Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 17, who has been out of school for the last year on account of illness. I have recovered much of my health, but am lonesome, because I have nothing to do. I want to join a dramatic club. I like this work very much. At my former high school, I was featured in every play. I would like to find some club to join. Do you know of any? PATTY GENE. Answer—l am glad you sent your address. If any one answers your letter, I will forward the answer to you. I also have letters for “Disappointed.” Several women have written who want to find jobs as housekeepers. If any of our readers want help at home, please write to Jane Jordan. The one thing I can’t do is to find jobs. It is almost hopeless for people to write asking for work. Sorority Will Hold Annual Benefit Party Pledges and members of Epsilon Pi chapter of Delta Theta Tau, national philanthropic sorority, will give their annual benefit bridge party at the Columbia Club Wednesday night. Mrs. Donovan A. Turk is general chairman. Pupils of the Peggy Lou Snyder school of dancing will present a short program, and two dramatic art students of Mrs. E. A. Bebout will give selected readings. Other members of the arrangements committee are Misses Dorothy Addington, Ruby Windhorst, Nellie Passons, and Mrs. Maurice Johnston. Mrs. E. O. Alloway is assistant general chairman. Dr. and Mrs. Joe W. Sovine, Judge and Mrs. Dan V. White, Dr. and Mrs. Ethelbert R. Wilson, Judge and Mrs. Earl R. Cox, Dr. and Mrs. Sylvan Bush, Judge and Mrs. Frank P. Baker, and Messrs and Mesdames Herbert E. Wilson, Merton Johnson, Walter Pritchard, Hollie Shideler, Glenn B. Ralston, Harvey A. Grabill. Thomas .E. Garvin, Charles A. Grossart, Laman J. Foster of Greensburg, and James A. Watson.

MAY BREAKFAST TO BE HELD IN CHURCH Calendar Aid Society of the Central Christian church will hold its annual May breakfast Wednesday in the church. Mrs. Ralph Kenington is president of the society. A one-act play, “Everybody’s Husband,” directed by Miss Mary Beatrice Whitman, will be presented with the following cast: Mesdames S. G. How r ard, Carl L. Withmer, Victor Hintze, F. H. Seay and Wayne Redick. Mrs. Walter E. Jenney will read selections from ‘‘Tales of Old Japan.” Mrs. R. E.. Avels, Mrs. Paul Dorsey and Mrs. H. E. Gruber will sing songs, accompanied by Mrs. Laurene Hayes. MOTHERS ARE FETED BY ALUMNAE CLUB Indianapolis Alumnae Association of Alpha Sigma Alpha sorority entertained the Mothers Club of the Butler Teachers college Saturday afternoon at the home of Miss Evelyn Hall, 920 East Forty-second street. An original song by Miss Helen Selvage was dedicated to the Mothers Club. Appointments were in yellow and white, the club colors. The hostess w r as assisted by Mrs. Howard J. McDavitt, Mrs. B. F. Leib and Mss Eloise Proctor. Miss Selvage, Miss Proctori Miss Kathryn Faust and Mrs. Edward Karman w r ere in charge of the program. STYLE SHOW GIVEN AT SORORITY HOUSE Style show and tea featured the meeting of the Tri Psi sorority Saturday afternoon at the Delta Delta Delta chapter house, 809 Hampton drive. Mrs. Thomas Bowser, national president, and Mrs. C. W. Graves, president, poured. Miss Helen Fisher sang a group of songs and Miss Maxine Jones gave several readings. Mondels included Misses Martha Barton, Charlotte Cashon, Helen Eiser, Eunice Mae Howell and Alice Jane Brownlee. Hats and gowns were from the Miss Amyl McDaniel Gown Shop.

Sororities

Alpha chapter of the Theta Chi Omega sorority will hold a business meeting tonight at the home of Miss Marie Wasson, 1259 Congress avenue. lota Kappa sorority will meet tonight at the home of Miss Viola Boan, 1226 Shepard street. Lodge Program Set Women of the Moose will hold a special program Thursday in the Moose hall. Mesdames Emma Featherstone, Agnes White, Dora Minker and Ellen Mersion will present musical selections. All members are invited.

PERMANENTSOS The H*antfful j M ine. Complete w Shampoo. Self- <£ 1 Setting Wave $ I BEAUTE ARTES Ll 0$:0 601 ROO-EVEI.T BCiXi.

All-Rubber Bathing Suit Makes Popularity Bid in Model Show at Mayer's Complete Drying in Few Seconds Is Advantage Claimed by Maker; Colors Are Accented in Other Lines. BY HELEN LINDSAY. AN unusual and informal fashion showing was featured at Charles Mayer's Saturday, when the new all-rubber bathing suits were modeled. The suits are made of a rubber material known as ' KrepeTex." similar to the rubber used in bathing caps. Interesting claims are made for the suits by the manufacturers. Because they are made of rubber, they absorb no water, and the bather is

assured that she will be completely dry a few seconds after emerging from the water. Two different styles are displayed, both two-piece garments, made in becoming and suitable beach-wear colors. One has a top with tiny shoulder straps, backless. except for a waist band which crosses at the back of the waist, and shapes in a trim fastening at the front. Trunks and tops are fastened with snaps. The other is a bandeaux effect, with a tiny strap around the neck, and a snap fastening at the back of the waist. Tiny rosebuds decorating the shoulder, also are made of rubber. Probably the most attractive thing about these new suits will be fetching shoulder capes of "Krepe-Tex.” Accompanying the suits are unusual bathing caps, in "Monte Carlo” style, originally designed by a Parisian milliner. These are in turban design, and have the appear-

ance of hats for street wear. They have ribbon-like straps in contrasting color, which are to be wound about the head, and tied in a perky bow. The new beach shoes, to be worn with the new suits, are all-rubber ones, with straps and medium shaped heels. They have been fashioned of rubber in a novelty design, and have the trim, neat appearance of sport shoes. a a a Jantzen Produces New Knit JANTZEN suits, which always have been considered by swimmers among the finest, are developed this year in more attractive color combinations than ever before, and instead of being made of plain weave, are shown in “Krinkle Knit" material. This is like a waffle cloth. Riff red. gold and suntan, and Lido and shell are some of the new colors that these suits have introduced. Bright-colored beach robes of English import are made of terry cloth, with cape collars, and a cord fastening at the neck. They can be used as capes, or as beach blankets. Alligators, frogs, ducks, sharks, and many other huge and lifelike water animals are included in the display of 'water playthings" shown at Mayer’s. These will be interesting for youthful swimmers, as they are designed with broad saddle-like backs, on which one can perch for a sun bath in the water. ana 'Jackets Have Wide Color Range EVERY kind of a pique jacket is to be found at Morrison's. There are short sport jackets, in fitted line, coming just to the waist, and threequarter length ones, featuring the pleated at the shoulder sleeve. Colors range in these from white to pastel shades, and browns. ana Massaging Machine Has New Gadgets A “MAGNETIC massage” machine, suggested for facials, scalp treatments, and for reducing, is shown at H. P. Wasson's. This new gadget has three attachments to serve individual purposes. A flat round piece is to be used for facials; a soft rubber attachment, with small projections, for scalp treatments, and a cup applicator for massage, which is recommended for reducing.

CHEER CLUB WILL INSTALL PRESIDENT Mrs. Walter H. Geisel will be installed as president of the Cheer Broadcasters Club at the June meeting in the Municipal Gardens department club. A covered dish luncheon will be followed by the business meeting. Other officers are: Mrs. Wil-

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JMAY 15, 1933

Mrs. Lindsay

son B. Parker, first vice-president; Mrs. William H. Hogdson, second vice-president; Mrs. Earl M. Robbins, recording secretary; Mrs. J. W. Vestal, corresponding secretry; parliamentarian, Mrs. C. K McDowell, and directors, Mesdames Harry A. McDonald. Ottis Carmichael. C. O. Sorenson. Wolf Sussman and Elmor Prange.