Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1934 — Page 19
(JUNE 8, 1934.
[Patron List | Announced for Dance Annual Notre Dame Event Scheduled for Next Monday. Patrons and patronesses are announced for the fourth annual summer dance to be held by the Indianapolis Club of the University of Notre Dame Monday night at Trees. John P. Carr, general chairman, announces the following alumni and friends as patrons and patronesses: Drs. and Mesdames John J. Briggs, Paul Kernel, Joseph Kernel, J. J. Spalding, Raymond Bosley, Robert Dwyer and William Miller, and Michael F. Morrisey, Mrs. James Flaherty, William Greener, Dr. Anderson and Albert Feeney. Others will be Messrs, and Mesdames Charles A. Grossart, JVilliam Schnorr, Leonard Schmitt, Henry Langsenkamp, Thomas D. McGee, Harry T. Brost, Chester Ehrich, Edward Schneider, Frank O. Wilking, William Fogarty, W. B. Sequartz, Albert E. Lamb, 'E. C. Borchert, Frank Pittman, John Royse, Bert Lepert, J. F. O'Mahoney, Humbert Pagiani, James Rocap, I. N. Worth, A1 Lauck, John Bulger, Thomas Gillispie and Thomas Quinn. With Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGovern Sr., will be Messrs, and Mesdames Edmund Bingham, Walter R. Shiel Sr., Leo K. Smith, George Hoffman, Herbert Shimer, W. J. Robinson, William B. Sullivan, George A. Smith, Thomas Mahaffey, John K. Ruckelshaus, William Umphrey, Matthew Herold, Frank Kotteman, William Caughlin, -W. D. Kibler, Peter C. • Kartland, Harry Ferguson, W. L. Snodgress, Leo Welch, William Reilly, William Royse, J. J. Speaks, J. J. Fitzgerald, Walter Jackson, George O’Connor, Roy Reed, William B. Peake, Herman Schmitt, William Mooney, J. J. McCaslin, M. T. Feeney. M. P. Kestler, L. F. Sexton, Paul Kernan, William F. Fox Jr.. John Rice, W. A. Brennan and John J. Madden. Club to Hold Picnic Members of the II Jamalie Club and their husbands will attend a picnic Sunday at the summer home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bager, near Maysville. Mrs. Baker and Mrs. H. I# Richardson will be in charge.
w&lOKlflr i® new amazing l “cream,” mends rips, tears, holes, burns, snags, in any kind of fabric without needle and thread! For cotton, wool, silk, denim, etc. Quicker, neater, easier. MENDS DON’T SHOW.' BOILS! WASHES! IRONS! Now. an hour’s mendlng takes a few minutes. Also hems, seams, pleats, MIISI tucks, etc. Stops runs in hose. GUARANTEED! x Tear out this ad and set Sew-No-More at KRESGE’S. 17 \X. Washington St.; AVOOUVORXH’S, 7 E. and 303 XV. Washington St.; McCROKY’S. 17 E. Washington St.; MIRPHI’S, 41 X. Illinois St., and 1053 Virginia Aye., or any 5e & 10c or dry goods store. Also in targe 2oc tubes at WALGREEX’S. Agents! Write So-Lo YVorks, Dept. S, Cincinnati, O. See demonstrations at: MURPHY’S, 41 N. Illinois St., and McCRORY’S, 17 E. Washington street.
Miller-Wohl In a Special /jt\ Selling £or Tomorrow I t ///;) \ Only- | mffjm ft/ J 18 Styles / ( YOU’LL MARVEL AT VAL- / ill UES LIKE THESE —BUY 7m YOUR WHOLE SUMMER L , ..ML SHOE WARDROBE FOR / : - THE SAVINGS ARE MORE I ■ ,’ J THAN SENSATIONAL. | . Jfr, , .
cjaij^^offiehrL • i \ djW, \ c uw UAh \l Qlflrui unll need JA MUv olJw- oi * // \Ha IWuGnq V * II Wi \ijrJirrx, >} U f 1 l| Vis X Afcr ■ . \.\ 4 p CjO-LeleP and lyiialif* U \ ( bu-feru- lend a- i d v ' \ UP K V 'TDake. * “ j I <Po.IW 2.6 0 \\ \f ®
Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 260. Size Name Street City State
HERE’S a morning frock with a vivacious touch, and you’d be surprised how easy it is to model in gingham or percale. It is designed for sizes 34 to 44. Size 34 requires 4?i yards of 35-inch fabric plus 2-3 yard contrast, or 4 7 / s yards in monotone. To obtain a pattern and simple sewing chart of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Julia Boyd, The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, together with 15 cents in coin.
SHOWER TO HONOR JUNE BRIDE-ELECT Miss Mary McCormick, brideelect, will attend a personal shower and bridge party tonight to be given by Miss Mary McDonald at the home of Mrs. W. B. Ward, 316 North Kenmore road. The marriage of Miss McCormick and Wiley Orville Wilson will take place June 15. Guests with Miss McCormick and her mother, Mrs. F. E. McCormick, will be Mesdames Frederick Buchanan; Rex Hoffman, Anderson; Harry Ray, John Grob, Paul Myers,
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Stewed rhubarb, cereal, cream, breadcrumb pancakes, maple syrup, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Cream of tomato soup, croutons, cottage cheese, quick fruit rolls, grape juice. Dinner — Cabbage rolls, rice timbales, spinach, mince pie, milk, coffee.
Carl Hanske, George McDaniels, William Frenzel and George Henderson; Misses Florence McDonald, Virginia Small, Anna Thiele, Lois Ann Hodgin, Helen Adolay. Dorothy Lawson, Frieda Hopinger, Jean Rose of Greenwood and Jean Culbertson of Hanover. Open Hcu§e Scheduled Open house will be held at St. Elizabeth’s home, Churchman avenue, Sunday afternoon by the Mother Theodore Circle, Daughters of Isabella. Cards will be played. Luncheon Fetes Club Mrs. J. L. McDermid entertained members of the Cheer Broadcasters Club at a covered-dish luncheon and bridge party today at her home in Forest Manor road.
a,# QosdfoMi4r&z u^i” Jir'j Great New Customer Sale 68* Dinner Set Consisting of a 42-PIECE SET, 22-KT. WHITE hmnsttsi GoLD decorated dishes All 68 Pcs. for Only—/ a tfj or\ The Greatest Sale of Dinnerware we I! w|w jj Either the Dishes or the Silverplate Would Be an Astounding 1 Value at the Price We Are Asking for the Entire Set ... Get Yours Early! Only 3 5< Down!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMIIP
Lotteries H ave Lure for Women State - Ruled Gambling , Assured of Getting Feminine Aid. BY GRETTA PALMER Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, June B.—A great many persons, it seems, were made happy by the Irish Sweepstakes. There were many Americans, all of whom would quite willingly have placed their bets on an American race. But the money went abroad.
There is a certain puritanical conviction here that it is un-American to hold state lotteries. One of those ideas that came down from the Plymouth Rock citizenry dominates our public opinion. And so we send the money over to Europe and let other countries’ treasuries
’wjmr ~i. ,:. JP
Profit by acting Miss Palmer as outlets for
the gambling instinct that is native with men—and with women. For the heads of our state are hereby informed that women are the true gamblers of the nation and that it would be the women who would make the most enthusiastic cash customers if a lottery were provided by the state. It is simple to tell why. , At Monte Carlo there are no old men clawing at the croupiers and counters. This rather disagreeable phenomenon is provided by our sex exclusively. Gambling is the final passion of the kind, of antisocial old woman who has no granddaughters to worry about. And we women are gamblers in other ways. The normal unattended bachelor can predict, with a fair certainty, what is going to happen to him tomorrow. He will be fired or advanced—his income Will shrink or increase with the devigations of his own handling of affairs. But a single woman has the whole world spread before her. Every cocktail party may mean an introduction to a millionaire of vast riches, who will marry her and give her a private car. Life, for the unmarried woman of 1934, is one enormous gamble of infinite possibilities. MISS JACKSON WED IN CHURCH SERVICE Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Jackson announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Joyce Jackson, and Robert E. Throckmorton. The ceremony took place at 10 Thursday morning in the Elizabeth Goodnow Wicks chapter of the All Souls Unitarian church with Dr. F. S. C. Wicks officiating.
. A Woman’s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
Norman h. davis, we were told, sailed for Europe expressing little hope for international agreements at the disarmaments conference. The behavior of men on questions of national import, of national existence even, would be riotously funny if it were not fraught with such tragic consequences for us all. Asa usual thing they act exactly like a bunch of beliggerent small boys trying to rib up a few fights in the alley. They dare each other to cross imaginary chalk lines. They shake guns in one another’s faces. Not one will budge a single inch on any ancestral stand, however foolish it may be. Human nature being what it is, I suppose we should not be discouraged over the progress we have made. But now and then, you can’t help wondering whether the persons who hold in their hands the destiny of the races will ever quit acting like small boys and behave like men. The individual with a good
Dinner to Fete Wedding Party of Miss Kittle The bridal party for the wedding of Miss Marjorie Kittle and Biagio Lapenta at 10 tomorrow morning at SS. Peter and Paul cathedral will be at dinner tdnight at the Woodstock Club by Miss Kittle’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane Kittle. Dr. and Mrs. Lapenta, parents of Mr. Lapenta, will be guests. The attendants are Mrs. Burton Hart Jackson, Greenwich, Conn., the bride-elect’s sister, matron of honor; Miss Catherine Lapenta, the bride-groom-elect’s sister, and Miss Elizabeth Heiskell, bridesmaids; Ainsworth Wade, Sturgis, Mich., best man, and James Nicolai, Terre Haute, Mr. Jackson, Arthur Julian and John Sloane Kittle Jr., brother of the bride-elect, ushers, will be dinner guests. The dining room will be decorated with painted daisies in shades of peach and blue, the bridal colors. Mounds of painted daisies and lighted blue tapers will form the table centerpiece. Mrs. lies Ogle entertained yesterday with a tea for Miss Kittle. Besides Miss Kittle’s bridal attendants, Mrs. Kittle and Mrs. Lapenta, guests were Miss Betty Wallerich, Mrs. Henry Todd and Mrs. Norman R. Keevers. VIRGINIA HILL IS BRIDE OF ATHLETE Mr. and Mrs. Lew Hill, 6051 Central avenue, announce the marriage of their daughter, Miss Virginia Hill, to John C. Cavosie, Ironwood. Mich. The wedding took place Jan. 27 at Greenfield. Mr. Cavosie is a former Butler university athlete. Indianapolis Women’s Bible Teachers Association will meet Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Bert Garwood, 149 West Twenty-ninth street. Mrs. Edward F. Kramer will speak.
thriving business, living amicably with his neighbors, uses enougn common sense to retain the good will of his patrons. Yet he seems content to abide in a world forever stewing with war scares. Although he has the example of all past tragedies to warn him, he sits stubbornly, if precariously, on his pet powder mine. He will work industriously as an ant to husband his substance and conserve his harvests, though he well knows if his country goes to war all his toil is vain. His property may be confiscated and his family wiped from the very face of the earth. Still the men assure us they do not want war. Well, what is it they desire then? They certainly never behave as if they wanted anything else.
Daily Recipe HAM RELISH ROLLS 16 slices graham bread U tablespoons soft butter /z cup chopped ham 2 tablespoons pickle relish U olives, chopped 3 tablespoons salad dressing Cut off crusts from bread. Mix rest of ingredients and when soft and creamy, spread on bread slices and roll each slice up like small jelly roll, rap rolls in waxed paper and then in damp cloth and store in the refrigerator until serving time. Use sharp knife and cut each little roll in four slices and arrange the “rings” flat side up on a shallow dish.
I Mr. Magic Buyer says: “Grant’s low prices make it possible for every mother to JimyLjTp?/ dress her children well—for very little money!” M Sun Suits and Overalls Iw Lightweight chambray and [py\ \ broadcloth cut full! Fast Grant’s Prices Are Much Lower! i ■ Sill' ‘ Sizes 1 to 3 Sixes 2 to 6 15.-25-39-Children’s SUfRVVICr SIIOCS White sandals or tan elk ox-fords-—easy to jump abont in. lint have plenty <>f supJust sj pr Sixes BV Z to 2 for the oxfords. | Sixes 6i/ 2 to 2 for the sandals. v- fL Socks .nd Anklets In. k Large variety of patterns at //( L\ \7\ \ N. Grant’s extremely low price! Stock up while the assortment is / Children’s Sizes M;m%. 5,0 BV2 - f Cc pr. 814 to 2. SATURDAY LUNCHEONETTE SPECIAL! ROAST Stuffed Young PLUMP CHICKEN Served with corn dressing, tender fresh , ■■ string beans, An Grautin potatoes, foil W bk. and butter, Coffee, Iced Tea or Butter J Milk. dmm m 0 LOWgry Come In at Eight and Eat i A GRANT BREAKFAST FRIED EGG AND Qj| ' BACON TOAST ■ I| A AND COFFEE I TT^ I V • I t. rj/jienjih. 'mst iJdfflfl 25 EAST WASHINGTON M
Mrs. Huffine to Be Honored at Bon Voyage Fete Bon voyage supper party will be given tonight at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Royer Knode Brown for Mrs. Elizabeth Huffine, Madison, Wis. Mrs. Huffine, house guest of Mr. and Mrs. George A. Miller, 5430 North Delaware street, wil leave July 1 for a trip to Europe. Mrs. Miller will assist her daughter with hospitalities and garden
WHILE THEY LAST B DRESSES IS Another snappy selection of prints . . . print ensembles ... and pastel shades, a very GOOD VALVE ON CREDIT. 20c Down S .9 5 PPI 25c a Week M i/ipi “ M . your Credit Is 43-45 S. Illinois St. MIGHT
PAGE 19
flowers will be used throughout the rooms. „ Guests will include Mrs. Huffine; Karl V. Huffine, Hammond; Mr. and. Mrs. Miller; John Miller; Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Mount, Kirklin; W. N. Mount; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Huffine and son Jimmie, Alexandria; Miss Frances Wilson, Wabash, and Mrs. W. P. Knode.
