Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 13, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1935 — Page 6

PAGE 6

Friends of /Stage Days Will Meet Ricca Scott Titus and Philip Leigh Played in Same Company. BY BEATRICE BLRC.AN Ttmr* Wm i Par* 14ior "IRrHEN Ricca Scott Titus, a * * Civic Theater favorite of lor.? standing. was playing the ingenue roles in a stock company in New York abouU2o years ago. the juvenile. Philip Leigh, singled her out a h.' favorite co-worker. Asa tribute to their comradeship, he c pent

his idle moments during rehearsals dr a wing caricatures of her on the backs of lined note papers. Last week Mrs. Titus noted that Mr. Leigh would be here in the cast of the Theater Guild company presenting Mary of Scot--land” yesterday and today at Eng-

Miss Burgan

Ush's. llls name revived thoughts of those stock-playmg days, and her scrap book yielded a collection of the caricatures, which she had saved. During all Mr. Leigh's success with the Theater Guild es New York. Mrs. Titus has not seen her former partner. *Le* and I shared a lot of pet-pce-es and we used to encourage each other in our Huffs,” Mrs. Titus said. One of the caricatures lllustra es one of these moments. Mrs. TitU' then known as Ricca Scott, was given oiu" a bit part in the third act of “My Partner's Girl.” She didn't think much of the director's juagment and minced no words in confiding in Lee. The car. iture shows her flouncing her full skirts, the corners of her mouth curled in contempt as she mutters, ira not saying a word.” Leigh succeeded in catching a resemblance in his sketches. The iar e dark eyes and the tiny pursed mouth are characteristics of each drawing. Favors One Drawing Mrs Titus' favorite shows her huddled in the fur collar of her coat. Her chin is hidden in the fur. a large plumed hat sits on her wavy hair and her eyes shine out appealingly. "I always arrived at ti:e theater shivering in the winter time.” she recalled, “and always wrapped as snugly as possible in my coat ' The sketch is labeled “Ricca Scott as pensive Pansy in Poor. Proud and Pathetic.’" She expected to see Mr. Leigh before the matinee today. -I'm sure he will enjoy this one.” she said as she pointed to a sketch of the cast, which he drew on the occasion of the first hae&stage reception held by the company for the patrons of the.r show. . In the background are sketched the group of players with varying degrees of smiles. In the forecround tiny line figures, in various stages of adulation. are greeting the actors. Mr. Leigh's family was prominent in New York and one member of the family was a friend of Mrs. Clarence Mackay. She of the dresses discarded from her wardrobe to Mr. Leigh. w*ho immediately turned them over to Mrs. Titus for her stage wardrobe. One of these dresses was fashioned of exquisite silver clofh and trimmed with rhinestones set on silver net. The gown had cost $730. Recalls Outburst "When I wore it in one of the plays I felt very elegant and the stage crew, whose favor I always sought, kindly turned a white 'spot’ on me to create a really dazzling effect. The leading lady was furious at this attention, and at rehearsal insisted that I should give a dance in the scene. The gown was heavy and its loveliness required only posing to achieve the proper affect. The dance was doomed to be clumsy with me wearing the gown." Mrs Titus still has the rhinestone trimming, and the silver gown is in the Civic wardrobe. The trimming was used on the Tudor style satm gown, which she wore in a recital “Patterns.” a few years ago at the playhouse. “Lee wore a hat. an old hat that must have been a 100. He loved it and wouldn't buy anew one. It was the despair of all of us. so one day I and another girl of the cast stole it from him. Practically in tears, he searched the place but failed to find it. Finally he bought anew one. which he wore begrudgingly. His family was so delighted that we had separated him from his relic that one member sent each of us a fancy doll.” Chib Will Elect Zetathea Club officers will be elected at a meeting tomorrow at the home of Mrs. R. H. Hollywood. 5555 Broadway.

Why Pay More? £. vfFL (./ 1/ PRICE '* SALE Our Reg M \ ulae . ■ Crouuignolr or Spiral | | Take a4uiit>ir <*f this remarkable bargain hil there la till! time. Other Permanent# at One-Pals Off Jl Tala*. I *' Tala*. { Value, complete. , complete. complete. $5 $3.50 $2.50 Xakart Valor. Permanent. ,P a COMPLETE. ANV TIME Men Barber# Hair Dretng Kctirei Hair Detn* UM Sat t*f action A*ured No Appointment Xerratary BEAUTY Graduate MART Operator! W, Market Street Vf* COM. II I IN.>l-. AND -I c *0 MARKET STREETS *0 Oaoa * A. M. to 7 P. M. LI-9MB

Chib Card Party Aids

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Left to Right—Miss Helen Hittle and Miss Mabel Murrer. Miss Helen Hittle and Miss Mabel Murrer are members of Alpha Gamma Latreian Club assisting with arrangements for a bridge party to be held Wednesday, April 3. at the Columbia Club. Proceeds will be used for the club's work at the Bridgeport Nutrition Camp.

Manners and Morals _BV JANE JORDAN

Pat tout mont pufilinr problem before Jane Jordan and read her comment* in this column. Dear Jane Jordan—l am a young man 17 years old and I am not sure there is any such tning as “true love.” I'm just as human as any one and at times am carried away

by romantic emotions. I am too young to have much first hand inf o r mation on the subject of true love, but one does not need it when he sees people on all sides making wrecks of their lives together when they had made vows of true, eternal love. Human beings are

if?

Jane Jordan

so constructed that they can keep on making vows of true, eternal love with a succession of mates as long as there remains a breath of spring in their souls. Science, not just I, doubts if man is truly so monogamous as he imagines himself. I am not so foolish as to believe that there is but one mate destined for each of us; therefore I find it hard to believe in a true, constant love, the kind of love the poets write about. I do believe that a person can be in this fervent state temporarily. By the time it is past, there are family responsibilities to keep man and woman together. Then in older age. years of association tends to keep man and woman together in what appears to be chosen monogamy. However, even this doesn't pan out often. Do you really think I can be an "emotional cripple," with a “tangled emotional set-up” for not being sure of the presence of the kind of love which makes all other women uninteresting. undesirable because of the overwhelming love borne for the "one and only?" SEVENTEEN.. Answer—No. certainly not. But if you are still in the same adolescent state of mind at 40 or 50, you will be. Your doubtful state of mind augurs well for your future. When you do make a choice it is apt to be an intelligent one. based on mature needs instead of infantile wishes. This will do much to keep you out of the messes you see on all sides. The chances are you will never find a woman who makes all others uninteresting and undesirable. The phosphorescent type of love which has inspired everything from suicide to poetry is probably a neurotic illness, anyway. I agree with you and with science in douoting that either man or woman is monogamous, for unwavering mental and physical fidelity to one person is probably impossible. This may seem like a direct contradiction of what I said to you before, that the person who is incapable of achieving continuity in his love life is an emotional cripple. Let me explain. The difference between an infant and an adult is that the adult has learned to renounce one desire in favor of another. The infant simply wants what he wants when he wants it and bawls for it. The emotion of love is one of the oldest and most persistent of human cravings. Those who have lost their faith in it have by no means lost the need of it. They are unable to solve the conflict between a craving for adventurous variety and for permanence. To discover the deep values of a love partnership is a life time under-

NEVER BEFORE and Never Again TWO PERMANENTS jM*. FOR tbe PRICE Include. Hair StKS* Finger tt a Neck Trim. M ’wß w Pad# Freah Solutions Mk BjSf Oroqutgnole or 2 FOR Si -01 Bring a W I Friend ■ S9e Each HI'RRY! Act now you may never be able to duplicate this bargain. Otl Hasp I Bob) log Egjptian Oil I L'M W 0 I tor I.dt t toe jfdl 1 for $3 81 |

taking which can not be realized in a series of unimportant sallies. The mature person simply renounces the sallies in order to guard a more valuable relationship. It is not that the sallies cease to tempt him. He gives them up for the sams reason that he does not eat food which gives his palate pleasure followed by a stomach ache. Mere freedom to pursue every new desire may lead to a more profound unhappiness than normal subordination of impulse to social convention. Much of what we call sex freedom is simply a form of narcissism and is contrary to love which flows away from the ego toward some other who is more dearly loved than the self. He who seeks to recapture the radiance of love again and again by changing partners, and who can not encompass the various needs of love consistently with one person is on a par with the infant who wants every desire gratified without personal responsibility. I am sorry that I have not enough space to answer the first part of your letter. If this does not clear up your question, write again. Your letters are so interesting that I do not wish to discourage you by a short answer.

Wild Oats Ball Will Be Preceded by Cocktail and Dinner Parties

Cocktail and dinner parties will precede the Wild Oats ball ’o be held Saturday night in the Columbia Club ballroom by the Indiana Saddle Horse Association. Perry Meek, chairman, and Mrs. Meek will entertain with a cocktail party at their country home before their guests go to the ball. In their SOCIETY TO HOLD LUNCHEON MEETING Monthly luncheon-meeting of the Martha Hawkins Society of the First Baptist Church will be held tomorrow at the home of Mrs. C. W. Atwater. Mrs. Paul McCarty, Mrs. E. L. McCarty and Mrs. F. A. Rice will assist the hostess. Mrs. John Downing Johnson will be guest speaker. Dinner to Honor Two Mrs. J. Harvey Wright will entertain Mothers and Daughters Club members at her home Thursday night A birtl day dinner honoring Miss Nellie Mae Larkins and Mrs. Wright will precede the business meeting and card party.

BECAME BRIDE SUNDAY

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—Photo by Kirkpatrick. Mrs. Roger W. Miner Miss Rosemary Dedert. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Dedert, became the bride of Roger W. Miner, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Miner, in a ceremony Sunday. The at-home announcement is for 3334 Kenwood-av.

A WE CLEAN Domestic and Oriental RUGS §0 and OverstufTed Furniture k| All Kinds of Repairs H At ork Guaranteed McKILVEY & KELL | 81-1934 502-4 S. Penn. St.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Clubs Offer Exhibits of Gardening City-Wide Institute to Open Thursday at Tomlinson Hall. Garden dubs participating In the institute or the Indianapolis Council of Garden Clubs from Thursday through Saturday at Tomlinson Hall will arrange exhibits of garden services. The demonstrations will be held in the afternoons. Arbutus Garden Club, with Mrs. Carl Helm, president, will offer a “Rose Specialty,” demonstrating preparation of soil, planting and care of roses. Neophyte Garden Club will display garden literature, consisting of magazines, catalogues and books. Mrs. Paul Beard is president and will be assisted by members of the club. Woman’s Department Club garden section will stress the importance of garden club organizing. Mrs. Howard Painter is chairman of the section and will be prepared to give information on the subject consisting of electing officers, appointing committees and assembling helpful programs for the year. Garden study group., newly organized group of women who have entered gardens in the city beautification contests, has as its president Mrs. Ernest Becker. The group will be in charge of a bureau, providing information on different kinds of garden service. North End Garden Club, Mrs. Minor S. Goulding, president, with the assistance of members will demonstrate “Seed Planting in Flats” in preparation for outdoor planting. The demonstration will illustrate the starting of the flat, its care until the plants are transplanted to pots preparatory to outdoor planting. Mrs. Perry O’Neal will assist on Friday afternoon. Mrs. William Taylor is president of the Emerson Grove Garden Club, which will have charge of the “Tree Planting Campaign Office.” The Municipal Gardens Department Club garden section will demonstrate preparation of soil, planting and care of peonies. Mrs. Charles Judy is chairman. MRS. GOLL HEADS P.-T. A. OF COUNTY Mrs. Henry F. Goll was re-elected president of the Marion County Council of Parents and Teachers at a convention meeting yesterday at the Severin. Other officers include Mrs. Bert Yeager, first vice president; Mrs. Raymond Stewart, second vice president; Mrs. George Bowen, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Harvey Coons, recording secretary and Floyd Bass, treasurer. Directors include Mesdames John Askren, Jamts L. Murray and Floyd Beghtel. Mrs. Logan Hughes, president of the Indiana Congress of Parents and Teachers, and a special guest, extended invitation to members to attend the parents’ institute at Purdue University April 3 and 4. Mr. Bass spoke on beautification of school grounds.

party will be Messrs, and Mesdames David Andrews, Albert Beveridge Jr., D. E. Gleason, John K. Ruckelshaus, George H Denny, Laurens Henderson and W. E. Barnard. Dining at Mr. and Mrs. Fred Norris’ Traders Point home will be Maj. and Mrs. Charles E. Cox and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bose. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Test’s dinner guests will be Messrs, and Mesdames Frank Hoke, Perry Lesh and Ralph Boozer. Dr. and Mrs. Lyman Pearson will entertain several friends at a buffet supper. The guests will include Messrs. and Mesdames Frank Throop, Clair Kimber. Ray Sparrow, Allen Boyd, James Ruddell, Robert Stempfel, Caleb York, A. W. Metzger, A. W. Rodecker, Louis Hensley, Joseph Stafford, Lucius B. Hamilton, Judge and Mrs. Herbert E. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Crowell, Lebanon. One of the parties attending the ball will include Messrs, and Mesdames John Lange, R. W. Sinz, W. A. Suiter, Willis Connor and Russell L. White. CHURCH GROUP TO PRESENT PROGRAM Japanese program will be held by the women of the First Congregational Church from 2 to 5 Friday for the benefit of Upland Sanatorium in the Tennessee Mountains. Hostesses will be Mesdames George L. Davis, Harold B. West, Harold E. Sutherlin, William G. Hennis and Ira B. Ketcham. Members and their friends are invited to attend. Miss Cynthia Pearl Mans will be guest artist. A program of Japanese music will be presented by Mrs. Berta Miller Ruick, organist, and Mrs. Irene Heppner, soloist. MEETING OF CLUB GROUP POSTPONED Meeting of American home department of the Women's Department Club scheduled for tomorrow, has been postponed until Friday, March 29, because of the death of Mrs. Peter J. Van Geyt, daughter of the club president. Mrs. R. O. McAlexander and Dr. McAlexander. Support Candidacy Monday Club members at a meeting yesterday at the Severin indorsed Mrs. O. E. Mehring as a director of the Indianapolis Council of Women.

Card Parties

Hayward-Barcus Auxiliary No. 55. American Legion, will sponsor a card party and dinner for members and guests tomorrow night at the Foodcraft Shop. Mrs. Carlos A. Morris is president, and Mrs. A. M. Snyder, chairman. Euchre and bunco party will be held at 8:30 tomorrow L'ight by Marion Council, S. B. A., gt Castle hall, 330 £* Ohio-st*

Patou Spring Offering

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Patou trims this lightweight white paper panama for spring wit’ a fantasy in black and white feathers.

Contract Bridge

Today’s Contract Problem South is playing the contract at six spades. West opens the king of diamonds. Would you take the club finesse, or how would you play the hand if you found on the first spade trick that West was void of trump? A75 4 2 V K 2 ♦A4 3 2 lA K J N (Blind) W E (Blind) Dealer AAK9 S 6 3 VA 8 3 ♦ 9 *854 Solution in next issue; 19

This is the last of six articles on the Tapel formula for recognizing and executing the squeeze play, as expounded in E. Hall Downes’ new book entitled, "Squeezes, Coups and End Plays.” BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League TJEFORE considering the final element in the Tapel formula for the squeeze play, let me review the main points in the formula. These are as follows: 1. In every squeeze there must be two threats in different suits. These must be a one-card threat in one suit and a two-or-more card threat in another suit. 2. You must assume that only one opponent is able to guard your two threats. 3. You must be able to project the play down to the point where the hand of the opponent to be squeezed contains only the neccessary cards to guard the two threat suits. 4. At the squeeze position you must have a final entry card into the opposite hand. 5. At the squeeze position you must make a squeeze 1 id—that is, you must lead a suit of which the opponent to be squeezed is void, therefore forcing him to discard his control over one of your two threats, thus transforming that threat (loser) into a winner, the needed extra .trick. Unless all these five elements are present, there can be no squeeze. They are interdependent and must be considered as a single unit. If any one of them is missing—there can be no squeeze. 0 0 0 NOW let us consider the last element —the squeeze lead —in the Tapel formula. After you have accurately developed the first four elements in the Tapel formula and you have placed your opponent in a squeeze position, you must be able to make a lead that will squeeze him. This is always the lead of a suit of which the opponent to be squeezed is void, thereby forcing him to discard. Since your opponent’s hand contains only control cards over your two threats, he is compelled to discard one of these controls, automatically transforming one of your threat cards into a winner. This is exactly what happens in every squeeze. In the example above. South leads the spade seven at the 11th trick. Since West holds no spades, he is compelled to discard either the club jack or the diamond jack. No matter which of these he chooses to drop, he will automatically estab-

Sororities

Mrs. Irene Flick will be hostess to Gamma Beta Chi sorority at 6:15 tomorrow night at the Foodcraft Shop. Mrs. N. B. Finney will entertain the Janett Ada Club members on Thursday afternoon at her home, 5163 Manlove-av. Lambda chapter. Omega Phi Tau sorority, will hold pledge services at 8 tomorrow night at the home ci Miss Isabelle Boggs, 1257 W. 31st-'’’. for Misses Alta Place, Dorothy Drake, Ruth Boggs, Vivian Henthorn, Dorothy Henthorn. Patricia Mason. Esther Finchum and Mrs. Alma Woods. Alpha Tau Chapter, Alpha Zeta Beta Sorority, will hold a special meeting at 8 tomorrow in the Lincoln to arrange to attend the Eta province meeting Saturday gnd Sunday in Marion,

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lish an extra winner for the declarer. When the squeeze is properly executed, the opponent is helpless. He can not prevent creation of an extra trick f or the declarer. The squeeze lead need not be a trump, although in most squeezes the last trump generally is the squeeze lead. The squeeze lead may be any card of which the opponent to be squeezed is void. This is the important point. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.)

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AT RAYMOND THOMPSON'S Beauty Salon the other day I saw a transformation in the making! . Most interesting to a JlLy J watch Monsieur Martyn carefully weave each trwfm lustrous hair into one long and beautiful piece. And I couldn't help thinking how much more attractive the owner will be when this hair is arranged perhaps in a smart coronet braid to crown her short locks. Take your long tresses to RAYMOND THOMPSON in the Test Bldg., for successful “transformation" ... in the 1935 mode. 9 0 9 “Slacks" are the latest shoes for growing girls. In California young misses are wearing these casual shoes for every in- -\ formal hour in the day. Soft, flexible f /'.iV'yTspu shoes with a world { J//U of grown-up style. Just a comfortable low heel tie / I in all-white, brown and \ white, or blue and white. Nr-T Young ladies . . . and their mothers . . . will live in “Slacks" this season. To be sure, at MAROTT’S 3rd floor you'll find the best in children’s footwear—both novelty and standard styles. And when you buy shoes for any children from babies on up to ’teen age . . . remember the moccasin type shoe is the most comfortable for growing feet. MAROTT'S have many dressy types among these correct shoes. This 3rd floor, devoted to children's shoes, has the largest selection in the state ... to say nothing of its Playland. Here the children may be left to play contentedly while mothers “Shop Around.” There’s always a nurse in attendance. Youngsters have a glorious time in the doll house, the sand pile, and on the slide . . . with their old friend Mickey Mouse and Pop Eye on the wall. Will you ever forget those screamingly funny mirrors that bulge and shrink with your horribly distorted images? It’s •fun to buy the family's footwear at MAROTT'S! 000 Prince Matchabelli says — To select the right perfume, try a little on your skin. If the perfume likes you—then you will like the perfume. Use it always.

Tech School Girls’ Work in Dress and Hat Making Will Be Put on Display Toys, Lamp Shades, Novelty Pillows and Gift Articles Also to Be Shown Tomorrow and Thursday. BY HELEN LINDSAY A BILITY and ingenuity of Technical High School girls in dressmakmg and millinery will be shown tomorrow and Thursday in the tenth annual spring exhibit of the vocational classes, which will be in the form of open house at the school, from 9 to 5 each day. Accompanying the display of hats by members of the class of Miss Frances Buschmann will be toys, lamp shades, novelty pillows and gift shop articles. Among the dresses which have been made by members of Miss Hazel Barrow's dressmaking class are two graduation dresses of white flat crepe.

Eight white uniforms, which will be worn by salesgirls in the Technical bake shop, also have been made by members of these classes Other features of the open house which will be of interest to visitors will include an exhibit of a project in welfare work, which has been under the direction of Miss Hilda Kreft. Girl members of the Home Economics Club will take care of small children accompanying their parents to the exhibit. A playlet will be given by members of Miss Frieda Ann Bach's social practice classes. Other exhibits will be baking by Technical High School boys under the direction of Miss Georgia McDonald and preparation of one-dish meals by pupils of Miss Leona Miller. Miniature layouts of rooms which have been reno-

vated by students of home economics classes, under the direction of Miss Helen Murray, will be shown, and correct school dress and accessories will be displayed by members of Miss Eleanor Ament's and Miss Pearl Apland's classes. Weaving by pupils of Miss Emily McCullough, textile teacher, will be done on looms before the visitors. a a a b b a Modernization Is Exposition Theme MANY new ideas for making homes more comfortable, up-to-date and attractive are demonstrated in the Modernization Exposition, which will be sponsored by the New York City Better Housing Committee of the Federal Housing Administration. The exposition is being held next week in the Port Authority Commerce Building, New York, and includes displays of innumerable materials and equipment, such as paints, woodwork, plumbing, heating, electrical fixtures and decorative furnishings. Property owners will derive many suggestions as to how to make houses more attractive to themselves and tenants from the displays. New color schemes and suggestions on how to adapt them to one’s cv.n home form an interesting part of the exposition. A series of miniature houses, ranging from the usual types to the ultra-modern home of tomorrow are shown, with painted interiors and exteriors in a wide range of effects. In the model home of tomorrow, remarkable for its fidelity detail of the life-size prototype now being built in Yonkers, N. Y., the visitor may see how to transform a dingy basement into a useful game room by brightening the walls with paint and also how modern schemes can recreate other rooms. , BBS B B B Completed Remodeling Projects Shown OF more than ordinary interest is an architectural exhibit of remodeled buildings in photographs and floor plans. A life-sized display of two actual tenement rooms, with all their furnishings, taken from an abandoned east side home are shown. They have been recreated to demonstrate how the New York housing authority has replaced them by better ones in slum clearance and better housing projects. Decorated interiors, with attractive arrangements of furniture, rugs and fabrics, emphasize color. Painted panels suggest different vail treatments and demonstrations of how to put on various finishes are Talks are given each day on problems connected with building, decorating and modernization, and in addition the Federal Housing Administration is conducting an information bureau to answer questions on how to arrange for loans for home renovation, how to estimate costs, and ho to get the work done most economically. .

AUTHOR'S LECTURE WILL BE SUBJECT Final discussion of arrangements for the Caroline Miller lecture will be held at a meeting of Theta Sigma

tHead first into the Easter season with pre - views and news shop-full of interest. If you but folio v in my footsteps . . . you'll discover the high points of good shopping. Should your pet interest still be unanswered, give me a ring or pen a personal note . . . and I’ll scout around despite my spring fever. RI-5551 is the number. And now a thousand good-buys to you ...

Here's an idea if you're clever. Fashion your own leather beret and belt to match . . . from colorful kidskin. 0 0 0 Why don’t you plan that luncheon or dinner at the HOTEL LINCOLN? It’s perfect for entertaining either oCL A a rou P °* s or 500 •' Sr Because from the time you select A J‘° u r menu until all g F\ is assembled and served piping hot—- ' you haven’t a single worry. And that, my dears, is all because the management takes such a special interest in each of its guests. The menu carries dainty dishes which especially will please feminine guests. And also the preferences of hungry business men who must rush from luncheon clubs to banquets and back. 000 I have seen a particularly smart piece of luggage —a generous handbag that folds long clothes neatly away carrying them for miles without wrinkle or crease. 000 For perfect safety—it is wise to buy drugs at the BROOKSHIRE PHARMACY. Only the best, the freshest, the highest quality drugs come in ... and only the most carefully compounded medicines go out. This modern chemist’s shop upholds a fine reputation and at the same time maintains very reasonable prices. Have your drugs delivered. 217 N. Penn. St. LI-2094.

MARCH 26, 1935

Mrs. Lindsay

Phi Alumnae at 7:30 tonight at the home of Miss Winifred Smith, 108 E. 13th-st. The group will present Mrs. Miller, author of “Lamb in His Bosom,” in a talk at 8:30 Tuesday at Caleb Mills Hall.

If you seek a good restaurantone that is unique in service, superior in food quality, and one which can be depended on for a good meal —my answer is the MERIDIAN GRILL. An intimate sort of atmosphere plus home-made delicacies and a wide range of prices. Your guests will enjoy your admirable discovery of 2708 N. Meridian-st. 000 I’ve good news for all you enthusiasts of SO-AM Yerba Mate. (It you aren't one, I believe you will -be.) The famous South American tea is going completely Hoosier with a gala part in tha Home Show. This opportunity to try Mate was just made to order ... by all means stop at the display of SOAM Yerba Mate . . . and drink your health. This is your invitation. Honest, I’ve been delegated to invite every one of you to stop by for a stimulating, refreshing cup of delicious Mate. It's the only way to know this beverage—try it. Throughout the week of April 5-14 at the Home Show just inside the main entrance and to the left. Salud! A mis amigos! 000 Beautiful floors are improved with proper rugs and floor coverings. Don't envy other homes . . . enrich your own with the selections at the COLO- 5? NI A L FURNITURE jSW CO. From the newest patterns in inlaid linoleums to the mag- . /• m \ nificent Karastan reproductions of luxuri- jn.' ous orientals . . . COLONIAL is equipped $ to furnish your floors. Tests have been made by Karastan with originals and copies only to find it most impossible to distinguish one from the other. Yet the prices of the reproductions remain hundreds of dollars lower in price. Anew shipment of distinctive patterns in Sandura Felt Base floor coverings has arrived boasting a patented extra surface. You’ll find Sandura easy to care for and suitable for many rooms beside the kitchen. The COLONIAL does seem the logical store in which to purchase rugs with the hand-made Rooked pattern effects. Due to the interest in early American decorative schemes these rugs of hooked design are among the most popular being bought. Get to the bottom of spring cleaning by rejuvenating the floors. 00 Be seeing you on Thursday.