Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 154, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 November 1934 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Rabbit and Quail to Be Hunted Soon Several City Men Waiting With Dogs for Start of Season. BY BEATRICE Bl ROAN Tlmm Ktgiia’i Pt|t Uilw 'T'HE huntsmen and their faith- *■ ful friends, the hunting dogs, literally are on their toes for the opening of the quail season on Saturday and rabbit hunting on Monday Many of the dogs have been in kennels during the closed season, where they have been kept in train-

ing. Masters and dogs alike are celebr a t ing reunions, and the crisp frosty mornings arouse fervent urges to start in pursuit of scampering rabbits or to flush a covey of quail. Dr. B K. Westfall owns three aristocrats of the breed. His English setters, Frostweed, Blazer and Pat. are

Miw Surgan

litter mates and direct descendants of Countess, claimed to be one of the greatest English setters. Dr. Westfall has a collection of ribbons which the dogs have won in bench events and field trials, in which Judging is under natural shooting conditions. They have won awards for retrieving the greatest number o? birds at the all-American field tnals in various quail districts in other states. The dogs are rangy and powerful, pure white and tipped in spots with brown. They are with Dr. West- | fall a few days before he and Dr. Raymond Beelar go to Rennselaer for quail hunting next week-end. Dr. Westfall is anticipating a good hunt, j George L. Denny and his English setter. Tad, will go quail hunting Saturday near Bloomfield at Carl Eveleigh's place. Ted usually goes w:th Mr. Denny to one of the gun clubs he frequents, the skeet fields 1 of Crows Nest and the Indianapolis Gun Club. Mr. Eveleigh hunts quail with his | setter. Winchie. C. Willis Adams, who frequently hunts with Mr. Eve- , leigh and Mr. Denny, has just received a big pointer from the south. Pointers, we are told, have short hair in contrast to the long hair of the setter. When Dr. Glenn J. Pell goes into the field, he is accompanied by his English setter. One of the veteran quail gunners in this territory is Dr Thomas Noble Sr., whose setter. Sport Hunters Delight, has won many trophies. Dr. Noble's kennel also includes several bird dogs. Mrs. Hathaway Simmons, who has won several women's skeet titles, hunts with Mr. Simmons. Jenny, i their English setter, has the reputation of scenting quail if they are any place in the field. BOARD OF NURSERY TO HOLD MEETING Mr6. R. A. Dennis, president of the board of managers of the Indianapolis Day Nursery Association, will preside at the monthly meeting of the board at 10:30 tomorrow morning at the home, 542 Lockerbie street. CHRISTMAS CHEER GROUP ANNOUNCED Mrs. Louis Markun. president of the auxiliary to Indianapolis past. Ameriran Legion, has announced the Christmas cheer committee, winch will meet all day with the auxiliary tomorrow at the home of Mrs. M. J. Spring. 1308 Central avenue. Committee members are: Mesdames E. P. Brennan. John Downing. John O. Haymaker. Hiram Stonecipher. Joseph Speaks. Charles Bebipger, John T. Cramp Jr.. Earl Blessing. J. T. Couchman. M. J. Spring. Herbert Winkler and Vernice Murray.

■ ™ ™ ■ 1 5 Daily Recipe ! OYSTER PIE 1 pint oysters . . Ji. tablespoons butter i 1 tablespoon corn- j starch I lj cup cold icater j Salt and pepper j Dash of cayenne j 1 tablespoon lemon j juice } Rich biscuit dough Put oysters with their liquor into a deep baking dish. Add butter and heat until butter is meked. Stir in the com- | starch dissolved in the cold j water, seasonings and lemon : juice. Roll biscuit dough to | one-half-inch thick the size j of the baking dish and lay on : top of oysters. Bake until I crust is done and a golden j brown.

Appetite gone? A Simple thing. perhaps... ret a rrT y furious ons, resulting in loss of strength...body weakness... and possibly many other ills. So whf not eheck-up and snap back to the’ srst of eating and well being. Y am will find S.S.S. a great, scien-tiftcallr-tested tonie—not just a socalled ’ tonk, but one specially designed to stimulate gastric secretions and also having the mineral dements so rery, eery necessary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin of the blood to enable you to “carry on." Do try it. Unless your case Is exceptional, you should soon enjoy again the satisfaction of appetising food and good digestion...sound sleep...and renewed strength. Remember, “S.S.S. makes you feel like yourself again.*’ fY Do aot h* blinded by the efforts of a g I fw nnetbieal dealers wbo may *u*. ar~ZZj (snt subetitutes. You bare • right to \ ■£[ insist that SSS. be supplied yon on nrwrt.lts lone yearn of preference your guarantee of eatufertioa. the world’s great blood medicine

Lelong Offers ‘Limited Editions'

B ' IjL

These are three of the Lelong creations being offered in “limited editions’’ in Paris at prices within the reach of women of moderate means. Left, a two-piece suit of black velvet; center, evening gown of all-silk satin in blue: right, tailored winter suit of reversible check, in brown and beige with touch of white.

Sorority Will Mark Founding at Dinner Fete Alpha Delta Theta sorority will celebrate founders’ day at a dinner and bridge Saturday night at Bamboo Inn. A feature of the program will be several tap dancing numbers by Hazel Gertrude Alfke, and a stunt entitled “Alpha Delta Theta Memories.” Mrs. Walter Alfke will preside. The committee in charge of arrangements consists of Misses Helen Tomlinson, Maude Russell, Marjorie : Wood, Bernice Giltner and Mrs. j Earl Dieck. Reservations have been made for j Misses Dorothy Forsythe, Mary Leslie, Katherine Maurer, La Verne Ridlen, Margaret Esterline, Elsie Shelley, Ruth Jones, Margaret Bradburn, Bernice Giltner, Elizabeth Gallagher, Beatrice Houze, Maude Russell, Helen Tomlinson and Marjorie Wood; Mesdames Eugene Garrison, Walter Alfke, Raymond Hiatt, Donald O'Neill, Earl Dieck, Alma Reese and Evelyn Daugherty. MEETING SLATED BY MOTHERS ’ CLUB Members of the Phi Delta Theta Mothers’ Club of Butler university w ill attend a 1 o'clock luncheon and business meeting tomorrow at the chapter house. Rcnchens Give Dinner Autumn colors appointed the table Monday night for the dinner Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Renchen gave at their home, 4430 Guilford avenue. Covers were laid for Betty Manning, George Eiklor and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stratton, all of Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Halcomb and son, Jack Halcomb.

Contract Bridge

Today's Contract Problem North and South are using the weak third hand club bid. South and West pass. North bids one club. East doubles. South bids two clubs. What should North do? 4 A 1 V J 4 A K 10 6 A765 4 3 2 a jm: n |a k ?„U 6 VK.IO 5 \y g VA6 3 _ ♦Q432£ ♦ J S 7 5 * IOS P"' ,* Q A8 7 b VQ9 8 7 4 ♦ 9 A A K JS Solution in next issue. 31

Solution to Previous Contract Problem. BY W. E. M'KEXXEY Secretary American Bridte Lesrue I RECENTLY was asked: "Does slam bidding play an important part in bridge tournaments?” After carefully thinking the question over, my answer is, it does. In the first place, the majority of I hands we bid are for game only, and the bid for game is a familiar procedure to most players; but slam hands are the exception. In a ses- ! sion of thirty boards, there may not be more than one slam hand. Seldom will you find more than three. Does it require finer play to make a slam than a game? Yes. decidedly so. because the declarer at a game I contract can lay his plans so that. I if one line of play fails, he can fall back on another. But at slam contract. he can lose only one trick. Usually this is lost in the early stages of the play and he can not try anything else. His line of play then lias to be accurate. Today's hand helped Mrs. H. L.

1

Manner's arid Morals BY JANE JORDAN

If yon are confused about your problems. talk them out with Jane Jordan. Put your case In a letter today and read your answer in a few days. Your problem can be rearranged so that it will not be recognized. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 20 and have been engaged for some time to a boy whom I thought was the greatest man on earth. I knew him and his family well, and we

never quarreled. I was never so shocked in my life as I was the day I found out he was not honest. He steals things and now is in prison. He has promised that h e will do right from now on; that he will show me he can do what is right. Os course, it will take him a long time to pay

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Jane Jordan

his debts and it would be quite a while before w r e could marry now. Should I go ahead as if nothing had happened, or should I turn him down? Os course, every one will be against him now. Would it be right to turn him down when he is already down? Or should I try to help him to get on the right road? He wants me to stand by him, but he wanted me to be honest with myself and do what is best for me. There is a saying, “Lift up the falling ones.” He says he loves me and I love him. He said he was forced into it and was made to promise never to tell. I will be glad to have your advice. ANXIOUS. Answer—The saying that bids you lift up the falling ones does not stipulate that you should marry them and spend the rest of your life in the lifting process. I am not at all impressed with this young man's promises to reform, for he has not yet shouldered the

I Peterson and Captain Fred G. French of Philadelphia to win the ! eastern Pennsylvania mixed-pair championship. This is the second time Mrs. Peterson has held the ! title, having won it last year with j the late Milton C. Work. a a a EAST’S opening lead was the jack of clubs. Captain French, I in the North, was the declarer. Before playing to the first trick, he took inventory; five spade tricks, possibly four heart tricks, one diamond and one club. Where was he going to get the twelfth trick? Os course, if West held the king of diamonds, the diamond finesse would give him the

A AQ 6 V A 10 Si ♦A J 5 AA 5 4 A? 7 3 N 4 2 fJ32y r y 9 7 4 +9743 c +KS62 * K3S D,.1„ * 31(19 8 A K J 10 8 5 K Q 5 ♦ Q 10 AQ 7 6 Duplicate— N and S vul. South West North East Pass Pass IN. T Pass 2 A Pass 3 N. T Pass 4N. T. Pass 6N. T. Pass Opening lead —A !• 31

extra trick, but If it failed, the contract would be defeated. Captain French decided to play the hand without the diamond finesse. He went up with the queen of clubs in dummy to kill West’s king. In other words, he had to start to plan his end play on the first trick. Now he ran off five spade gnd four heart tricks, being careful to keep in his own hand a small club. This left him with the ace-jack of diamonds and the five of clubs. Os course, East had to bear down to the king-six of diamonds and the ten-spot of clubs. Captain French then led a club, which East was forced to win with the ten. and then he had to lead from his kingsix of diamonds into declarer's acejack. This play gave the declarer his contract. i Copyright. 1914. NXA Service, lac.)

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

responsibility for what he did, but comforts himself with statement that somebody else was to blame. No stable person can be forced into dishonest acts. And no unstable person is strengthened one whit by his ow’n fine promises. You have here a young man who doubts his ability to compete w’ith other men for a livelihood. Because he doubts that he can succeed by legitimate effort, he uses his energies to outwit. The same energies, turned into useful channels, would have brought results. After all re-education of such a character is a job„for an expert, not a girl in love. The man who looks to a woman for his strength is a baby and a weakling, foredoomed to defeat. It is the task of each human being to assump the responsibility for his own acts', and to learn to live without refuge. In turning the young man down you force him to face the consequences of his own acts. You are neither heartless nor unchristian. You merely withhold unearned benefits from him. Every woman who marries has a right to expect a responsible attitude on the part of her partner. To accept less merely argues that she holds herself in low esteem, and mates with her inferior to increase her own prestige by comparison. a a a Dear Jane Jordan—l am a girl of 16. I have been going with a boy seven months. I think I am in love with him. At first we had three and four dates a week, but lately he hasn’t wanted dates so often. 1 heard through a iriend that he has had a date with a girl he used to go with, and I understand that he went w’ith her just to spite me. He asked me to drop him a card next week. Should I or not? Should I get in touch with him, or is he worth it? Do you think I am too young to go steady? Once he told me that as long as he could go w’ith me that he wouldn’t go back to this girl. I’m thinking of him all the time. But am I w’asting my time? JUST SIXTEEN. Answer—ls you will accept this boy on his own terms without being upset by his infantile efforts to make you jealous, perhaps you can have a very pleasant time with him. But even at 16 the possessive instinct is so strong in a woman that she thinks if a boy calls on her she has an option on his time. What difference does it make if he sees the other girl, You should be seeing other boys, too. At your age, both of you should see as many boys and girls as possible in order to have as wide a love choice as possible. It is folly to go steady.

LUNCHEON HELD AT TRUITT HOME

Smith college club members attended the second scholarship luncheon today at the home of Mrs. Frank Truitt, 4127 North Meridian street. Mrs. Truitt was assisted by Misses Anna Spann and Julia Moore; Mesdames Paul E. Fisher, John S. Harrison and Edward Mitchell. P.-T. A. Meetings Set New Bethel Parent-Teacher Association will meet at 7:30 tomorrow night in the school building. Shadeland school P.-T. A. will hold its regular meeting Tuesday, Nov. 13. with Miss Julia Landers, county safety director, as speaker. Pupils from the Indianapolis Musical Academy will present a play on safety. The Southport P.-T. A. is arranging a fall carnival for Nov. 23. Alumnae to Give Party St. Mary’s Academy Alumnae will make final arrangements for a card partv at a meeting at 8 tonight. Miss Elizabeth Brady is chairman of the party to be on Nov. 15.

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Small Dance j Series Will Open at Club " Junior League Event to Be Occasion for Other Parties. As evidence of their approval of the “small and early” parties of the Indianapolis Junior League, the members and their friends are arranging to attend the first of the group, a cabaret dance Saturday night at the Columbia Club. Mrs. Wayne Davis Kinnaird will entertain a group at her home at a buffet supper. Among the guests will be her house guest, Miss Louise Hegeler, Danville, 111. Mrs. Kin- j naird and her party later will go to the Columbia Club to dance. Frenzels to Entertain Following dinner, a group will stop at the Henry Frenzels Jr. be- 1 fore attending the carnival party, j Mr. and Mrs. Irving M. Fauvre, j Miss Elizabeth Van Hagen, Chicago, I and Henry Severin will dine with j Mr and Mrs. William Wemmer at the Wemmer home before the dance, ( and Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Pantzer will entertain several guests at dinner. j A dinner at the Conrad Ruckel- 1 shaus’ home will honor Mr. and Mrs. Lyman S. Ayres, who last week returned from their wedding trip. Covers also will be laid for Miss Anne Ayres, Miss Abby Beveridge, j Thomas Ruckelshaus, William N. j Stafford Jr. and John Williams. In Mr. and Mrs. Fisk Landers’ j dinner party will be Mr. and Mrs. j Talcott Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Howard and Mr. and Mrs. George H. Denny. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Latham will have several dinner guests. A dinner to be given by Miss Margaret Denny will honor Miss Frances Reed, whose marriage to Hans George Boehm, Evanston, 111., will take place soon. Group to Be Feted Mr. and Mrs. A. Ewing Sinclair and Mr. and Mrs. Norman Metzger have invited a group of guests for dinner at the Metzger.home before the league dance. Covers will be laid for Messrs, and Mesdames Otto Frenzel Jr., William C. Griffith, Sylvester Johnson Jr., John Blish, Seymour; Harold Ames, John Eaglesfield, George T. Parry, Julian C. Bobbs, Thomas Carruthers, Cincinnati; Frederick T. Holliday, Elias C. Atkins, William Munk, J. L. Davis, W. I. Longsworth, E. M. Chamberlin, John Joss and Dr. and Mrs. Dudley Pfaff and John Kinghan. RECENT BRIDE TO BE HONOR GUEST Mrs. Kenneth W. LeFeber, formerly Miss Margaret E. Beyers, will attend a miscellaneous shower tonight at the home of Miss Christina Valentine. Guests will include Mrs. John W. White and Mrs. Shelby Spencer; Misses Helen Johnson, May Louise Roessner, Leona Sachs, Golda Prevo, Mary Johnson and Mary V. Sullivan. Mrs. Alfred B. Valentine will assist her daughter with hospitalities. Bridal colors will appoint the party. CLUB ARRANGES FOR GUEST DAY Mrs. E. W. Stockdale, president of the Friday Afternoon Reading Club, and Mrs. A. G. Small, a past president, will pour at the annual guest day tea of the club Friday at the Caroline Scott Harrison D. A. R. chapter house. One hundred members and their guests are expected to attend. J. Russell Mclnnis, pianist, and Bess Larcher Mclnnis will present a musical program. In charge will be Mesdames C. E. Lupton, M. J. Moore, George H. Healey and E. J. Unruh. RELIEF DIRECTOR WILL BE SPEAKER Mrs. Cora Sharpe, county director in Flower Mission and relief work, will address the Bay Laurel Women’s Christian Temperance Union at 2 Friday at the home of Mrs. Harold Faulkner, 629 Berwick place. Mrs. Sharpe will give a demonstration of work in her department. Mrs. William G. Morgan will lead the devotional period and Mrs. Rose Winders will talk. Mrs. Claude Faulkner will preside. MEMBERSHIP TEST SET BY MUSIC ALE Auditions for membership in the active section of the Indianapolis Matinee Musicale, will be held at 10 Saturday, Nov. 17, at the home of Mrs. S. K. Ruick, 402 North Meridian street, Apt. 10. Mrs. Ruick is section chairman, and Miss Carolyn Richardson musicale president. Sorority to Meet Phi Beta dramatic sorority will be entertained tonight by Miss Betty McFadden. The program will include a discussion of Joyce Kilmer’s works by Miss Bernice Van Sickle; readings by Mrs. Helen Morten; play review by Miss Helen Kingham. and discussion of London plays by Miss Alberta Speicher.

Card Parties

Ladies’ auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans’ Home will hold a card party in the home at 8 tomorrow night with Mesdames Chris- ; tina Rather, Anna Habbney, Louis Brandt, Jacob Kurtz and Mary Baxter in charge. St. Mary Social Club will sponsor a card and lotto party tomorrow afternoon at the school hall, 315 North New Jersey street.

Loose. Broken Plates Made Like New .. ■ m Ilf PLATES REPAIRED WHILB TOO wan ■■ Loose, broken, ill- o gfl ■1 fitting pistes made 9 I Ike new. low as I 1 We Operate Our Own Laboratory^ JMV Out-of-Tew T 11/ four Pistes I.TUIH.ISL'R 2ND FLOOR LEMCKE BLDG. Cor. Feme, ud Market Sts. L.I-SH*

PRINCESS GOWN

f|i When Princess Marina attends formal functions, this is the gown she wears, an evening ensemble of black chiffon velvet and ermine, designed by Molyneux. MiSS HAYES, TO BE BRIDE SOON, FETED Mrs. John Lucid and Mrs. Walter Wibble will entertain tonight at a kitchen shower at the home of Mrs. Lucid in honor of Miss Mary Hayes, whose marriage to Carl Schmidt will take place Thanksgiving morning in St. Johns Catholic church. Guests will be Mesdames James Hayes, Martin Hayes, Michael Cain, James Farrell. Edward Troy, Martin Farrell, Timothy McMahon, L. H. Schmidt, Lawrence Turner, Patrick Casey, James Finley, Francis Gootee, Darrell Mitchell, Martin Cain, Ted Geobes, Joseph Schmidt, Joe Adolay, George Gilby, George Ayres, Edward Baker, Dwight Davis, John Lynch, Charles McMahon, Eugene Sullivan, Martin Gordon, John Deveney, Louis Schultz, Anna Sprong, Ella Kirchner, Thelma Weunsch, Julia Hayden, Margaret Layton Katherine Scanlon, Mary Cahill, Margaret Dwenger Helen Sweeney, Nora Cahill, Bridget Mulhurn, Ella McHugh, Trude Heiob, Mary Carroll, Ruth Dalton, Josephine Kelly, Mary Jacks, Ann Cangany and Nora Langdon. Misses Virginia Schmidt, Helen Adolay, Ruth Adoley, Elizabeth Lucid, Maryanne Lynch, Hannah Lynch, Mary Farrell, Ellen Cain, Dorothy Alhand, Anabelle Alhand, Mary Loftus and Kate Cangany. ALTENHEIM TO BE SCENE OF BAZAR Annual bazar of the Altenheim will be held next Wednesday at the home, 2007 North Capitol avenue, according to announcement of Mrs. Joseph S. Griggs, president of the auxiliary and general chairman. The supper and booth chairmen are: Mrs. Oscar Mueller, dining room; Mrs. Rose Webb, supper; Mrs. Louis Boerscell, bakery; Mrs. William E. Krieger, art; Mrs. Augustav G. Mack, parcel post; Mrs. Leo Rappaport, candy; Mrs. Charles Kistner, apron; Mrs. M. F. Hedges, fortune telling, and Mrs. Louisa Burke and Mrs. Anna Stedfeld, refreshments.

Sororities

Alpha Beta Phi sorority will sponsor a bridge party tomorrow night at the Columbia Club with Miss Ann Nies chairman. Mrs. Burch Nunley and Miss Mildred Marien will assist the chairman. Gamma chapter, Alpha Beta Phi sorority, will meet Monday night with Miss Mary Frances Kestler, 5222 East Washington street. Beta chapter, Xi Delta Xi sorority, will hold a scavenger hunt and weiner roast tonight at the home of Miss Mildred Woolman, 2433 Walker avenue, for members and rushees. Business meeting of Chi Beta Kappa sorority will be held at 8 tonight at the Y. W. C. A. The first of a series of rush parties of Gamma Phi Alpha sorority will be a “kid” party tonight with Miss Marjorie Meyer, hostess. Rushees include Misses Rosemary Linder, Vivian McDonald, Eileen Roley, Eleanor Karibo, Eleanor Sweeny, Lois Claus, Helen Turner and Mar/ Ann Gottemiller. Miss Helen Filcer is pledge captain. Members of Zeta chapter, Pi Omicron sorority, will meet tonight in the Lincoln.

This big, extra value, red, white and blue package brings you—“ The World’s Best” butter crackers. Get Americans at YOUR grocers! m

Women Given to Travel on Extensive Scale Use Simple Packing Methods Trick Suit Cases Avoided by Mary Lewis, Who Goes to Europe; Ruth Page, Dancer, Fights Shy of Trunks. BY HELEN LINDSAY THE average stay-at-home woman, whose trips are limited to summer vacations and occasional jaunts to visit relatives or attend club conventions, looks upon packing luggage as a serious task. While it still is a complex problem, some of the famous women globe trotters of America have perfected a technique of travel, and have worked out a sensible system of packing. Description of their methods, which well might be copied by other women, are described in the November House Beautiful.. Mary Lewis, vice-chairman of a New York store, who practically commutes to Europe, travels light by leaving home all the trick suitcases,

fitted bags and gadgets that her friends give her. In her trunk she stows away a duffel bag that can be used as a catch-all later. She never forgets cleansing tissue, a gargle, dark glasses and a typewriter, and always ties a colored ribbon on the loop of her trunk so she can spot it anywhere. Gracie Allen, radio star, identifies her trunk easily because it is painted white. She easily can find her personal possessions inside, because she packs certain hard-to-find articles in cellophane envelopes. Nightgowns, underwear, gloves and accessories are stowed away in different colored silk envelopes. Ruth Page, dancer, daughter of Mrs. Lafayette Page, Indianapolis, also leaves fancy baggage at home, and travels only with her fiber suitcases and fiber trunk. When she goes on an extended tour she fills

them with good clothes that will stand up under climatic conditions and hard wear. Any purchases she makes she has sent home directly, so she does not accumulate cargo as she goes. Grace Moore, opera singer and motion picture star, who will thrill Indianapolis theater-goers Sunday with her lovely voice, takes her own sheets with her when she travels. Miss Moore also has a special atomizer for spraying her throat. Mrs. Marshall Field always carries a smart red morocco bag that looks like a pillow’ bag. but is quite apt to contain magazines, bottles and various odds and ends. a a a a a a Wardrobe Suitcases Liked by Helen Hicks HELEN HICKS, golfer, travels with two types of clothes, sports and evening frocks, and packs them in wardrobe suitcases. An extra pocket in her golf bag takes care of tw r o extra pairs of golf shoes. Carola de Peyster Kip, beauty editor, always takes a wardrobe trunk for anything less than a week-end, and packs everything methodically in the trays so that she needs only to transfer the irays to dresser drawers. Alice Hughes, journalist, never takes a trunk, even if she goes to China, and limits herself to three bags, one of which contains a typewriter. Consolation rather than inspiration results from studying the packing methods of Neysa McMein, the artist. She always takes so many games and books that she has to stuff her clothes in anywhere they will go. Unpacking for Miss McMein consists in stirring the contents of her bag until the desired object comes to the top. For long trips, however, she makes sure she has a black dress and a black coat, a white dress and a white coat, and shoes to match each outfit, and she puts these together in every possible combination. a a a a a a Rubinstein Articles for Travel Offered THE importance of having all necessary articles available in traveling has inspired the creation of a collection of travel cases for toilet articles by Helena Rubinstein. The new articles in the toilet goods department of L. S. Ayres & Cos. are luxurious yet practical. The woman traveler can take her choice of kits intended for travel by land, sea or air, for Madame Rubinstein has taken into consideration all modern traveling problems in planning them. The airplane beauty kit is compact, and appropriately covered with airplane cloth, with red, peach or canary weatherproof lining. It provides a complete wardrobe. For the cruise, Madame Rubinstein presents a bag in fine cape seal grain, black or cocoa brown, which is silk lined. They contain six creams and lotions to protect the skin in sun and sea, and five cosmetics for complete make-up. The Bon Voyage beauty box is in full grain cow’hide, ecrase lizard grain, and lined in silk. It can be obtained in brown with fawn moire lining; blue or black with beige moire lining, and green or natural lizard with gray moire lining. This kit contains nineteen selected beauty creations and make-up. the bottles all in crystal and gilt. Another of the traveling kits was designed for a princess in Paris. It contains twenty-four beauty aids, and a three-piece sterling silver toilet set, consisting of hair brush and comb and clothes brush. There is even a chin strap included in this equipment. The case is of ecrase finish, imported pigskin lined with silk. This can be obtained in blue, tan or black, with honey dew lining, and green or natural lizard with gray lining.

P. T. A. Notes

Ross Williams of Manual high school, will speak on education at School 18 at 8 tonight. Music W’ill be provided by the Girls’ Glee Club, under the direction of Miss Isabella Mossman. Before the meeting friends and parents are invited to visit the rooms of the building. Open house in observance of education week will be held at School 21 tonight. Lloyd D. Claycombe will talk on education, and music will be provided by the men’s chorus from Woodside M. E. church. An address on “The Social Aspects of Education,” by Professor George Leonard of the Butler university school of education, will be the feature of a meeting at School 29 at 7:45 Friday. Installation of officers and a musical program will be given, followed by a social hour, during which parents and friends are invited to visit the rooms, where pupils’ work will be exhibited. Emmet Rice, assistant principal of Shortridge high school, will speak at School 35, at 8 Friday. Musical program will be provided by Miss Irene Bishop, Robert Rothman and the mothers’ chorus. Dr. Thurman Rice will speak on “A Common Sense Health Program” at School 36, at 7:45 tonight. Music will be given by the orchestra of the Capitol Avenue Methodist church, directed by Lynn Arthur, with James Reed, soloist. The meeting will be in charge of the fathers of the school. Open house, with childrens’ work on display in each of the rooms, will be held in observance of national education week, at School 41 from 7 to 10 tomorrow. A candy sale will follow.

J'T’i^JlM4„ r ,i

_NOV. 7, 1934

I? a .JSj&

Miss Lindsay

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