Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 95, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1934 — Page 9
AUG. 30, 1934-
MotOr Trip Serves for Honeymoon Douelas Hall and Bride Travel Following Home Wedding. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Arm:tape Hall left on a motor trip today following their mamagr at the Tnller home, 27 East Thirty-third street. The bnde. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pet**r P. Triller, attended Butler university here she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and Mr. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. William P. Hall was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity at Columbia university. The at-home address Is for Bloomington after Sept. 15. The Rev. George S. Soutfiworth read the ceremony In a setting of ferns and pink roses lighted with candles in two seven-branch candelabra. Mrs. Albert Rcep played wedding airs. The bride's only attendant, her sister, Mrs Bryon G. Sunderland. Michigan City, wore pale green lace with silver cap and slippers and earned an arm bouquet of Johanna Hill roses. The bride was given In marriage by her father. She wore white satin designed on princess lines with a Queen Anne lace collar. veil was of tulle, with a lace cap and she carried bride's roses. Mrs. Trilier appeared in French blue crepe with a corsage of pink roses and Mrs. Hall was gowned in black lace vith a rose corsage. Among the out-of-town guests were Dr. Byron G. Sunderland. Michigan City; Mrs. John Henschel and Mrs. Frank Petsch. Dubuque, la. Pledges to Entertain Pledges of Alpna chapter. Omega Nu Tau sorority, will entertain tonight with a benefit bridge party at the Hoosier Athletic Club. Miss Magdalen Buck will be chairman.
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Enclosed find 15 cents, for which send me Tattcrn No. 333. Size Name ••• Street City State
A FROCK like this will make any co-ed smart! To make this collegiate outfit you'll want washable silk for the blouse with broadcloth for the iacket and skirt. It's designed for sizes 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Sizes 18 requires 3 t yards of 35-inch fabric for the jacket and skirt and 2 1 * yards for the blouse. 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. The fall pattern book, with a complete selection of Julia Boyd designs. now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or. if you want to order it with the pattern above, send just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.
NOTICE I BRENNER'S " Will Be CLOSED all cay FRIDAY In Preparation for The Most Sensational Announcement in Our History Starting Saturday at 9 Watch Friday's Indianapolis Times
RETURNS HOME
_ • ———i—. Wffmm —■■ • a Miss Margaret Jones After a summer tour through Germany and Switzerland, Miss Margaret Jones, daughter of Mrs. Dovie O. Jones, 5524 East Michigan street, has returned home. Miss Jones attended the Royal Academy of Music in London prior to a vacation on the continent. Before returning to Indianapolis she visited Miss Harriett Hunt, Washington.
! A Day’s Menu I j Breakfast — Sliced peaches, cereal, ■ cream, sour cream wafj fles with butter and j honey, milk, coffee. { Luncheon—- | Tuna fish and celery salad, hot ice-box rolls, blue- ' berry' batter pudding, | milk, tea. | Dinner—- ? Boiled calf's tongue on a | bed of spinach, savory . carrots, frozen banana salad, toasted crackers, I cheese, milk, coffee.
Happiness Shattered by Gossip Instance Cited to Show How Act of Mercy Branded Woman. BY HELEN WELSHTMER ,\EA Serviee Staff Writer STRANGE what an evil tongue can do, isn’t it? No wonder the prediction was once given that he that holdeth his tongue deserves several more stars in his crown than he that merely fires some guns, drops some tear gas bombs and orders some other soldiers to hand over the city keys. The tongue that needs to be held usually belongs to a person who feels that it is his or her —sad to say it's usually a feminine urge—duty to make a little speech for your own good. “My dear, I won't mince matters. I'm doing this for your own welfare!” Thereby, the speaker ruins life, love and happiness and goes home to the sweet music of the crashing pieces as somebody's heaven falls. Good Deed Starts Talk Most normal, healthy adults, fortunately, are possessed of sufficient intelligence to know what they are doing and why they are doing it. They are not going to deliberately work injury to themselves and those dear to them. If they do have that design, then an intruder hasn’t a ghost of a chance, any way. Quite often persons are doing contrary to their own standard of wise living, even when appearances are against them. It was that way with the unmarried woman in a small town who disappeared recently. Her neighbors talked about her for befriending some homeless people. The group happened to include a man who had a small child. Well, the neighbors who talked had perfectly good husbands to protect them, but they didn’t offer to befriend the poverty-stricken family. They left the matter to a woman who lived alone and then made comments. Now nobody in the vicinity except the gossips gave a hoot about the matter. Real persons were too busy to care what other people were doing. The woman disappeared. The sharp-edged tongues said it was because she had done wrong, wrong with a capital W, which is supposed to spell something very bad. The woman was blameless. The tongues drove her away. Even if she had varied the conventions, it wasn’t the gossips’ business. Gossip Destroys Happiness Life and happiness are precious, Heaven doesn't last long on this earth. We are asked to help build, not destroy, another’s castle. The Spanish architecture of our dreams will go down swiftly enough in a storm without clutching fingers tearing apart the chimneys and breaking the window glass. Christ, you will remember, dined at the home of a publican and was gracious to Mary Magdalene. Even if the perfectly kind and honest woman had been less kind and less honest, certainly she was a human being worthy of being treated as one. The proposed criminal code in Germany suggests that criminals who must die be given a poison cup or a gun to use as suicide instruments if the criminals prefer. There are plenty of persons in Germany and America and any other pink or green spot on this terrestrial globe whose suicides or -disappearances are the result of a forced hemlock cup. We arrest persons for burning houses and stealing pocketbooks. But we have no punishment for those who crush hapiness and wreck lives. Happiness, after all, is worth more than a burned bungalow or a lost half dollar. Duty and sympathetic kindness are two different things. If we can’t be gracious let's keep our mouths closed. (Copyright. 1934. NEA Service. Inc.) Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Rybolt and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Littell are home after a vacation at Holland and Green Bay, Mich., and the Hillside resort, Lac Vieux Desere, Wis.
HORIZONTAL Answer to Frevious Puzzle 12 Anything 1,5 Who was the i __ steeped. Russian novel- AiL_h4. A ..IGIL_LLA.S.JLX 14 Early in life Ist in the LiE E M U|Bs POP E_ he was a picture? (pi.). 11 To wake from SBG.U. SjTM I KTJ I6 To exist. sleeD FT L SjEBBT P VL' 17 Southeast. 12To undermine. Craved. •jo garments A Is Gaelic * bSPaT ALMA 24 To renovate ' 18 Perforates. Op[TKE r 7,tC QU&k 26 L™ * 18 Game played I | I B GLUCK BIS A]Mj£ horses. on horseback. EiPIEQTI |A[ST ' 29 To make a lace 19 Suitable SSjßfeEk E A S 0B(C I 31 Sloe. 20 Testified. feH? I MbIAIL. I ‘sgTlLkl 35 Chair without 22 Measure of a back ' cloth. 40 Corpse. VERTICAL 37 Bird of prey. 23 Draft animal. 41 Like. 1 Water boat- 43 Dilatory. 24 Second note 42 Bone. men (insects). 45 Form of “a. in scale. 44 Impairs. 2To dispossess 46 Morning. 25 Type standard. N° good. 3 Custom. 47 Imitated. 27 Verb suffix. 51 Islet in a 4 Northeast. 48 To pant vio--28 Values. river - 5 Food staple In lenUy. 30 Leader of the 53 Prickly pear. the Pacific. 49 Deity. faithful. 54 Mud in run- 6To unclose. 50 Egyptian river 32 Black bird. ning water. 7 Senior. 51 Derby. 33 God of war. 56 At a distance. 8 Opposite of 52 Ratite bird. 34 Compound 58 Thing bottom. 54 Dry. ether. 59 Skirmish. 9 Instrument 55 Golf device. 36 Drain. 60 His master- 10 Screamed. 57 France. 38 Right. piece, " 11 He was a so- 59 Mother. 39 You and I.■” cialj— IT™ 2™" TANARUS"“ ■—-i- 7 ’5 17 ;pm jjv jupi fflwi ' 1. rrl Hiiil 11 i u
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Gladys Parker Offers Co-Ed Styles
. JL room are these two youthful — ■jm.Mgmk \ \ Gladys Parker models. The twot / \ t —i piece outfit Ueftt includes a biack y V \J flannel skirt with pleats in front / • .sMBHpr \. and back and a red flannel blouse ' / / w\ with 15611 across the back. The y / N belt is fastened with two large gold / y mV pen points to match the smaller y y tßjjt W ones on the front of th<* bodice. y y Jt \ \ The other flattering dress (right) / y &%,. \ \ is of rust ribbed wool. It has iny Jt \\ verted pleats in the sleeves and front x '<yy \ of tlie Mouse. a wide brown suede t .. belt and a metal slide fastening up 4 \\ the front. B—--t i&k -t' WgißpjWißmßß \ \ ■ / i., ‘ WiMm ;%8k: v HI . H M ?pf •? •■• j^i Tfrrf TANARUS"' T * H (gfclg&g jEut ,: *C3C?3ior' x ' • ■ Mut
A Woman’s Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON * Returning to the subject of divorces, why can’t we have printed announcements to relieve social embarrassment and as a straightforward way of dealing with what is now a most complicated problem? A gentleman has suggested the following form which, I trust, will meet the approval of Emily Post: . ■ , ■ ■ —. “Mr. and Mrs.
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Percy Zilch announce the divorce of their daughter, Emmaline, formerly Mrs. James Smithers, now restored to her maiden name of Emrr.aline Gladys Zilch. At home Tuesdays From 2 to 4 p. m.” It seems a
Mrs. Ferguson
sensible idea, since we long have followed the polite custom of wedding and birth announcements as well as death notices. After all, divorce means a vital change in a human relationship and the individual owes it to society to keep the records straight. Besides all that, such an innovation would bring divorce from the coverts where it now lurks, and lend it the air of respectability it so sadly lacks. If all serious - minded persons who sought dfvorce because they felt they no longer could live with
husband or w r ife would cease being so furtive about the business, and court sober, sedate newspaper publicity instead of shying away from, it, the moral atmosphere would be charged with anew kind of integrity. As the matter stands today, the publicity hounds have their matrimonial affairs all over the front page, while the ordinary individual does everything possible to keep his a secret. Enterprising ..reporters Wave to engage in diligent search of court records to discover such news, although its dissemination is as vital to public
AJATURALLY you would ' 'j&j Is take many precautions now—if you could look fpfi CTV r rc TXT into the future - You would take O M ILna ait better care of your eyes. Let AxW GLASSES HAVE Kay's check up on your vision. Os CHANGED! ||| Pay a Little Each Week KA V’si rb'T, s'vVSwl i..h |l4 A f§ optometrist pro- W ;£HS iffllMiisfr j correct lense for j eo k : tCY 137 W. WASHINGTON ST.
/oh OEAR-1 I SIMPLY HATE \ Y r - !>l9 c' A dOM’T MINO-") \ use r 1 n so/ ycj dn ' T MAKES DISHWASHINo') | / / AND EASY j * V — , Cyi NEXT DAY (and it saves) n 9 /the / RINSO FOR Thrills millions of women! RINSOS creamy suds soak out dirt —get -clothes 4or 5 shades whiter, safely. Clothes ,1 film I V. 188 last 2or 3 times longet. Makers of 40 famous i §fff* JV f washed recommend Rsnso. Gives thick, f fi lasting uds ntn in rarart 'aattr JB AMERICA'S 61GGEST-SELIING PACKAGE SOAP
PERFECT for campus and classroom are these two youthful Gladys Parker models. The twopiece outfit (left* includes a black flannel skirt with pleats in front and back and a red flannel blouse with belt across the back. The belt is fastened with two large gold pen points to match the smaller ones on the front of th bodice. The other flattering dress (right) is of rust ribbed wool. It has inverted pleats in the sleeves and front of the blouse, a wide brown suede belt and a metal slide fastening up the front.
welfare as any other change in the status of men and women. By altering our medieval opinions on this question, we could kill two birds with one sto-.e: Prick the bubble of the publicity racketeer, and put divorce upon the solid foundation we claim for it, but which we seldom justify by our behavior. So long as divorces are honorable things, they should occupy the place of honorable and legitimate news in the papers, with no more fanfare and no less than that now given to births, marriages or deaths.
MRS. HARBISON TO BE HOSOR GUEST Mrs. Robert Harbison, formerly Miss Florenc McDonald, will attend a bridge party and shower, which Mrs. Carl F. Hanske will give tonight. Decorations and appointments will be in yellow and white, j The guests will be Mrs. Harbison. Mesdames Fred Keithley, Jay Cox. John Grob. George McDaniel. Donald Hirschman, Charles Van Buskirk and Drew Ross: Misses Marjorie McDonald, Dorothy Baldridge. Bernice Gaskins. Mildred Amholter. Miriam Hillman. Catherine Thurston, Mary Harris and Dorothy Lawson.
Broken lots . . . odds and ends . . . merchandise that's become soiled from display and handling ... all marked for QUICK clearance! And .. . just look at the savings they mean for you! Our doors open at 8:30 A. M. sharp 1 10c io 19c Wash Goods Remnants £ c Broadcloths, voiles, ginghams and prints. Irregulars. 1 to 10yard lengths. Main Floor. YARD—--36-INCH WIDE CURTAIN GOODS £ c French marquisettes, fish nets and Boston nets. On sale, YARD Main Floor. PART LINEN TOWEL ENDS £ c With borders. % to 1-yard lengths. EACH— Main Floor. 5c MESH DISH CLOTHS *st~ c Size 15"xl5”. While this lot will last tomorrow. EACH— Main Floor, 15c TO 19c TURKISH TOWELS || c Size 18x36 and 20x40. Colored borders. (Seconds.) # Main Floor. EACH — CLEARANCE! DRESS PATTERNS | c Butteriok and Pictorial novelt.r patterns for women and chitamm^mm MAZDA ELECTRIC LIGHT BULBS * Outside frosted, white and colors. Reduced for clearance. EACH _ jjjj Second Floor. sc-lOc to 15c CHINAWARE Saucers, bread plates, etc. Firsts and irregulars. CHOICE — Second Floor. I LB. GAN CLIMAX BAKING POWDER C e 2rtr Value. Purest Burl best baking; powder. Second Floor. 24 SHEETS WRITING PAPER Odds of ends of white and patterned fine grade writing paper. Main Floor. WOMEN’S COLLAR and CUFF SETS f |J C Formerly sold at 2!>e to 390. Soiled )of. Lace and pique. Jj&h fflw Beautiful stvles and ilesigns. Main Floor SET 5c WOMEN’S HANDKERCHIEFS Plain white with dainty colored rolled edges on sale tomorrow. ® Main Floor EACH— Worn. 19c to 29c Rayon Undies* *,, Panties, stepins, medallion and rulfled trimmed. Tai- /mi lored styles. Second Floor. GARMENT—WOMEN’S BROADCLOTH SLIPS £ e Bodice tops. Flesh, peach and tea rose. Sizes 34 to 42. Second Floor. WOMEN’S WASH FROCKS Assorted patterns and colors. Vat dyed. Broken sizes. 1 ' ® Second Floor. WOMEN’S SUMMER SHOES £,f| Original prices $2 and *3. Broken sizes. Cleanup Price. 'm at.i jir lw Main Floor. PAIR—--29c CHILDREN’S PLAYSUITS * g Prints, ginghams and broadcloth. Broken sizes. J|L ® Second Floor. INFANTS’ RUBBER PANTS “ Small, medium and large sizes. Second Floor. PAIR 8188 Girls’ Rayon Taffeta Bloomers g\ Flesh, peach and white, in sizes 2. 4 and 6. PAIR— JH tlflv C Second Floor. ' Regular SI.OO Overnight Cases ’ 1S and 20-ineh with strong hardware —lock, kev and 3 ® hinges. I.eather handles. Main Floor. Boys’ $l Broadcloth Wash Suits £*gl c Fast color materials. In sizes 3to 9 years. Second Floor. ’BNr Men’s $l Sleeveless SWEATERS M'liite only in sizes 3S to 42. While they last. Main Floor, Men’s First Quality Fancy Hose Newest fall pattern*. Every pair guar. All color eombina- M /i® tions. Sixes in to 12. Main Floor. rair only 4t CLEARANCE! Rummage Table loc to 15c i pn t. TOILET Underwear GOODS Talcum and face powders, al- 2.V to si value*, rnion suits mond lotion, perfumes, com- athletic style*, ankle and knee pacts wave sets, combs and Broke'"* *ize*’"ffl petroleum jelly. Choice— lot GarmentSc 15:50-
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at Sander and Recker Furniture Now at Big Savings Drastic reduction prevailing in every department. SANDER & RECKER Furniture Cos. Meridian at Maryland
try A WANT AD IN THE TIMES.
