Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1936 — Page 8
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Director for WPA to Speak Council of Women to Hear Mrs. Letitia Hall Carter. Mrs. Letitia Hall Carter, WPA women's division director, is to talk on “Women s Work in the WPA’’ at the Indianapolis Council of Women meeting to be held from 10 to 12:30 Tuesday at Ayres’ auditorium. Mrs. Carl Foltz is to complete her term as president and is to install the new officers including Mrs. B. B. McDonald, president; Mrs. J. H. Armington. first vice president: Mrs. D. T. Weir, second vice president; Mrs. John W. Thornburgh, recording secretary; Mrs. Henry W. Ker. corresponding secretary, and Mrs. Fred J. Brown, treasurer. Toner Overley of the Better Business Bureau is to talk on ‘Fashion in Frauds.’’ Albert Stump of the Indianapolis Smoke Abatement League also has been invited to appear on the program. Mrs. J. P. Ragsdale Is to announce the American Legion poppy sale on May 23. Mrs. O E. Mehring is to present a resume of the Supreme Court ruling on the milk price rise case. Mrs. O. S. Jaquith’s topic is to be “Education in the W. C. T. U.”
Federation of Choruses to Meet May 14 The seventh annual business meeting of the Federation of Mothers' Choruses, Indianapolis public schools is to be held at 10 Thursday, May 14, at Broadway M. E. Church. A luncheon at 12:15 is to be followed by a musical program. Mrs. Gene Lubking is program chairman. Entertainment is to be as follows: Toccata and Fugue In D Minor Bach •Dreams" McGinnis Dale Young, organist •'The Violet" ~ Mozart The Letter’’ Frederick Stork •■Molly" Herbert Ralph Wright, baritone, school music director. • Valse Caprice” Montani Song Without Words" Budez Theme and Variations Thomas Pasquale Montani, harpist. “A Birthday" Horton Songs of Araby" Frederick Clay It Is May” Enrico Darraja Lark trio, Mesdames Lola Crockett, Juliet Shaw and Anna Bell; Mrs. Ralph Shepherd, accompanist. "Walsteln" Sonata Opus 53 .. Beethoven Allegro con brio Adagio molto J. Kelton Whetsine. pianist. HUGH BAKER JR. TO BE MARRIED Dr. and Mrs. L. T. Genung, Ithaca. In’. Y m have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Dorothy Cooper Genung, to Hugh J. Baker Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Baker. Party for Mothers Miss Helena Sipe is to be hostess for Alpha Beta Latreian’s mothers’ party Tuesday, at her home, 5202 Grand Vieu-dr. She is to be assisted by Mrs. Harold Victor and Miss Dorothy Phillips. Richard Mills Is to speak, and Mrs. Noble Hilgenberg is to sing.
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IT’S time to be getting that outdoors wardrobe together—and here's an ensemble that’s esential. It has the popular polo shirt with notched collar, comfortable shorts and a skirt that buttons down the front. Make of gingham, pique, seersucker or percale. Patterns are sized 14 to 20 and 32 to 42. Size 16 requires 2 T 4 yards of 35-inch material for blouse and shorts and 2*4 yards for skirt. To secure a PATTERN and STEP-EY-STEP SEWING INSTRUCTIONS, fill out the coupon below. THE SPRING AND SUMMER PATTERN BOOK, with a complete selection of late dress designs, now is ready. It's 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send in just an additional 10 cents with the coupon.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES, TODAY’S PATTERN BUREAU. 214 W. Maryland-st, Indianapolis. Inclosed is 15 cents in coty for Pattern No Size N*m* Address City State
LATEST FASHIONS FROM LOCAL SHOPS
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BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Times Fashion Editor LET'S declare a gala holiday and go shopping for bridal lingerie! Before you take the final vows, pledge yourself to the frothiest of boudoir array. It is a bride’s prerogative and the chance of a lifetime to go rampant on buying all the romantic “this and that” for inti-
Museum Guild Is to Install New Officers The children's Museum Guild’s new officers are to be installed at the annual joint meeting with the Irvington Guild May 14 at the museum. Miss Marjorie McDuffee is president of the former. On the board with her are Miss Catherine Lapenta, vice president; Miss Jane Moore, secretary, and Miss Ruth Hodges, treasurer. Mrs. Frank Sisson is the retiring president.
mate wear. Take a peep at a recent bride's choice of an alluring negligee and be inspired! Mrs. J. Irwin Cummings, (left) who before her marriage a few months ago was Miss Irma Drake, selected this bridal triumph in dusty rose satin. It may have been created by heaven, for all we know, with its exquisite Alencon lace backed by net, its dainty cape sleeves and shimmering satin buttons, with loops extending straightway down the front. It is a thing of beauty, and promises to be a joy forever. U tt TOP, right—Breakfast in bed may be spineless and self-in-dulgent but to our notion it is the only civilized way of starting the day. Select a filmy bed-jacket like this; order your coffee tray sent in and life will seem a bed of roses. Pleated and tucked chiffon of flesh tone, with deeper pink gardenias caught at the neck-line make an irresistible combination of feminine freshness. Lower, right—Trip about your boudoir in silver and flesh colored velvet mules like these and love every minute of the trip. The bows .are Frenchy and chic. The pinkish leather linings are soft to the touch, and twice as durable as the usual silk or satin bedroom slipper linings. “Lingerie like this,” says Mrs. Cummings, “is the most treasured part of a trousseau.” Besides this ultra-feminine negligee she selected a tailored house-coat of taffeta to wear on less dressy occasions, scads of satiny nightgowns and matching slips and undies. Local shops are brimming over with gossamer things that will send your heart aflutter with expectation. Our spring proposal is to be j off and see them for yourselves!
Setting Modern Table Is a Complicated Business
BY MARY MARGARET M'BRIDE NEW YORK. May, 6.—(NEA)— When you set a table for company these days, it is not a simple matter of bringing out your best linen and glass and china. Not. that is, if you are a hostess who cares about distinction. The time is gone forever when just any cloth, so long as it is fine damask or lace, will serve as background for your Sunday dishes. There is the question of color harmony to consider and the equally vital matter of matching designs. Take, for example, a buffet table laid with silvery cloth woven of metallized cellulose film (incidentally, it's nontarnishable). The ramekins of hammered pewter, as well as the drinking cups with pewter finish, carry out the color scheme. The modem center piece is blade of sapphire blue cellophane straws for accqnt with gray balls reflected on a mirror .plaque. Imagine hat you replace your pewter-color cups by glass and see how a fine effect could be spoiled. New Colors Imperishable The cloth in a breakfast table scene may be a deep ivory to serve as background for the ivory china. Napkins with a band of rich brown match the three pencil lines of color on each piece. The new china design is based on the circle. The plate is the shallow segment of a circle, the cereal bowl is a deeper segment, the teacup is a half circle, and the teapot and sugar bowls are complete circles. The color in this set strikes another of the new practical notes in china—it is completely unaffected by wear, water or acids. If your china has more than one
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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A. A. U. W Delegates to Attend Milwaukee Event
Mrs. Calvin R. Hamilton, presi-dent-elect of the Indianapolis branch, American Association of University Women, is to attend the Northeast-central section’s fifth biennial conference in Milwaukee Friday and Saturday, as a delegate. At the conference she is to summarize local A. A. U. W. activities, including administrative technique
Betrothed
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—Photo by Ayres Photo Reflex. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schuchman have announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Sadie Schuchman, above, to William Naperstick, son of Mrs. H. Naperstick.
color in it, by the way, try picking out and intensifying the most striking by embodying the same in cloth or doilies. If you use pottery, have a. cloth or mats of contrasting color—yellow pottery, maybe with a blue cloth, or green pottery with yellow doilies. Candles Match Cloth If there are candles, let them be the same color as the cloth. As for flowers, they are no longer massed in the center of the smarter tables. Small sets of crystal or pottery containers are used for single blossoms at the corners or in a row on each side, or even for one row down the center. If the china is flowered, the same fresh flowers are often used. Fruits, vegetables and nuts, especially as the holiday season comes on, can also fit into matching or contrasting color schemes. Cut glass, in simpler designs than our grandmothers knew, is back. If you use it. keep everything else simple—flamboyant colors or bizarre designs will make a table set with cut glass look cheap. Officers Chosen Southport Grade School P.-T. A.’s re-elected officers are Mrs. Roy Fleenor, president; Mrs. Charles Haggerty, vice president; Mrs. Irvin Mobley, secretary, and Mrs. Walter McLaughlin, treasurer. Hoosier Glasses All Styled Right JpjHk mad Priced Bight The Hoosier pSljp Optical Company P* 144 N. Illinois St. liLWEkm
developed here. She also is to report findings of the recent Indianapolis grade school survey, part of the state-wide public school evaluation made by the A. A. U. W. Mrs. Hamilton also is to serve on a committee which is to decide the time and place for the 1935 sectional conference. Mrs. Shonle Also to Attend Mrs. Horace A. Shonle, book and toy exhibit chairman, also is to attend the conference, where an exhibit she has prepared is to be displayed. Speakers are to include Dr. Glenn Frank, University of Wisconsin president; Dr. Winifred Kyd, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ont., dean of women, and Dr. Meta/Glass, A. A. U. W. national president. A reception is to be held Friday night, and the Indiana president and secretary are to be elected at an Indiana state meeting Saturday morning. Mrs. H. S. Dickey. Terre Haute, is the present Indiana president. CHURCH WOMEN OUTLINE PARTIES The St. Joan of Arc Women’s Club is to hold a bridge-tea and fashion show at L. S. Ayres & Cos. Auditorium at 2 May 21. A bingo party is to be given by the club at 8, May 22. in the school hall, 42d-st and Park-av. Mrs. Joseph H. Lang and Mrs. Robert E. Wilson are general chairmen.
Meet at Nursery The Indianapolis Day Nursery board of managers is to meet at 10:30 tomorrow at the nursery.
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Judges of Art Show Appointed Mrs. Willard B. Gates Is Arranging Display in Irvington. Judges for the annual arts and crafts exhibit, to be conducted by the Irvington Union of Clubs in the Irvington Masonic Temple, May 16, 17 and 18, were named today by Mrs. Willard B. Gates, chairman. They are Miss Gladys Denny, Russell Paidrick and Carl Graf. Prizes are to be awarded on the opening night. The exhibit is to be open from 3 to 8:30 Sunday, May 17, and a demonstration of craft work is to be given. On Monday art students are to model at the show. The exhibit is to be open Monday afternoon for school children. Entries are to be accepted all this week. Mrs. Gates said. Special emphasis has been placed on handmade furniture. The exhibit is to be the fifth annual show to be held by the union. It originally was conducted for amateur artists and craftsmen, to supplement the annual exhibit held by the union each fall for professional artists. Two artists who made their first showing in the arts and crafts exhibit have exhibited in the professional show. They are Miss Martha Lee Frost, sculptor, and William Keaser, artist. Mrs. George Gahagan, original chairman for the arts and crafts exhibit, is serving as adviser this year.
Girls’ Group Is to Give Play at School 76 Members of Fairy Camp Fire Bluebirds are to present a playlet. “How the Bluebird was Chosen Herald,” adapted from the story by Jav T. Stocking, at 3:15 Tuesday at School 76. Mrs. Richard Clark, group guardian, is to be arrangements chairman. Proceeds are to be used for group expenses. Fairy Group members have completed a large quilt, a block of which has been made by each member. It is to be displayed at the school and sold. The play cast includes Rosanne Walker, Norma Jane Klepfer, Betty Thompson, Wanda Sexton, Orena Williamson, Helga Hepple, Juanita Harris, Suzanne Reel, Catherine Antrobus, Joyce Irwin, Ann McPherson, Patricia Carey, Sara Rae McPherson, Dorothy Jean Clarkson, Dorothy Jeanne Mooney, Patty Britton, Jane Lingenfelter, Orpha Mae Neeley, Jacqueline Losche, Eleanor McClure, Rita Sebel. Nina Haig, Doris Hurt and Peggy Hodshire. Miss Jean Ann Davis, assistant guardian, designed and made costumes which are to be used in the play. She was assisted by Mesdames W. H. McPherson, J. W. Clarkson and W. Haig.
Good to Eat BY LOLA WYMAN
A CORNED beef scouffle is one of -*• those miraculous recipes that looks like a guest dinner and yet eases the strained budget. It’s something very new and something very good. I serve it with a mock Hollandaise sauce which I call Danish sauce. So here are the recipes: CORNED BEEF SOUFFLE FOR 4 2 tablespoons butter 1 slice garlic 1 large onion 2 tablespoons chopped parsley 2 tablespoons flour Cayenne and nutmeg Vt cup milk 3 eggs 1 can corned beef 1 tablespoon lemon juice Be sure you get the canned corned beef, not the corned beef hash. The canned corned beef costs only 19 cents. Directions are: Melt the butter, add the garlic, chopped onion, parsley. flour, lemon juice and dash of cayenne and nutmeg. When blended add the milk. Cook together and when thick and smooth add the yolks of the eggs, beaten and the corned beef shredded. Turn in the stiffly beaten egg whites and bake in a greased earthenware (or glass) casserole half an hour in a moderate oven (350). This will be puffy and delicious with a nice brown crust. DANISH SAUCE 1 cup medium white sauce 1-3 cup mayonnaise Juice of % lemon. 1 egg yolk To the white sauce (made of butter, flour and milk) add the mayonnaise which has been mixed with the lemon juice and the beaten egg yolk. Stir over heat for a minute. Serve hot. This sauce, incidentally, is excellent on cauliflower, asparagus or wherever a Hollandaise is called for.
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—Photo by Dexheimer-Carlon, Miss Marjorie Woirhaye (above) is to be married tomorrow in St. Catherine of Sienna rectory to Mark Rodenbeck. Miss Woirhaye is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Harry Woirhaye. Mr. Rodenbeck is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Frank Rodenbeck. Arcadia.
Study Your Sleep Needs BY ALICIA HART No one can tell better than yourself how many hours sleep you need each night. Most people require between seven and eight—some six—but the ones who can get along on less than six are few and far between. The woman who cares about her beauty ought to make simple, but rather exact tests to determine how much sleep she should have in order to feel energetic and good natured about 90 per cent of the time. For one week go on with your regular sleeping habits, but, each morning when you get out of bed, jot down in a notebook as accurately as you can exactly how you feel. Does Head Ache? Are you dying to get back into bed? Does your head ache? Does your neck feel tired? Do you resent, even slightly, the cheerfulness of some member of the family? Answer honestly, and save the answers. The following week sleep one hour longer each night. Analyze your mental and physical feelings every morning, and save this record. At the end of the week, compare the two lists. If the second doesn’t make pleasanter reading than the first, begin the third week by increasing your nightly sleeping one hour more. Each morning make the same kind of test and write down the answers. Try Less Sleep If these are even more disconcerting than those of the first week, maybe you've been getting too much sleep all along. Try less for a few days and see what happens. Keep on making tests until you discover how many hours you should sleep in order to feel fresh and glad to be alive right after breakfast in the morning. Os course, you can’t go to bed early every night of your life. Better to have an occasional headache in the morning than to lead any such dull.existence as that. However, don’t try to burn the candle at both ends for a week at a time. If you are up very late one night, do try to get proper rest the next.
Banquet Aid
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Miss Martha Banta (above) is a member of the committee arranging the matrix table banquet, to be sponsored jointly by the Butler and Indianapolis Alumnae Chapters, Theta Sigma Phi woman's journalistic sorority, next Tuesday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.
A Headcche is YOUR DANGER SIGN Don't let headaches go on neglected! They are na,l7 k ture’s first danger sign of afIHHA* ~ eyestrain. Why not enjoy j I new health by visiting our \ optical department tomor- ** \ ' y j \ \ row and • • • \M have your eyes / * W#S examined • Dependable Service • Quality Merchandise JMV fSlmlW fm l • Easy Payment Plan DR. LON D. SOREY Registered Optometrist
MAY 6, 1936
Women to Confer on WPA Aid State Leaders to Convene Here May 15. Mrs. Ellen S. Woodward. Washington. D. C., is to speak at the stair women's work conference schedule* by the Works Progress Administration May 15, at the Claypool. It is to be her first official visit to Indiana. She is to speak on “The Lasting Value of WPA.” Mrs. Izetta Jewell Miller. Kingwood, W. Va., regional woman's work director for Indiana. West Virginia,'Ohio. Kentucky. Delaware, District of Columbia, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, also is to speak. Women's advisory committees in the state's 11 WPA districts, township trustees sponsoring WPA sewing rooms and women's and professional project, as well as women's club representatives throughout the state are to attend the meeting. Indiana women’s work is to b< displayed. Local Baptist Women Attend District Meet Timm Special HUNTINGTON, W. Va.. May 6. Four Indianapolis women were attending the East Central District Association Baptist meeting, which convened here yesterday. It will close Friday. They were Mrs. Asa E. Hoy. Indianapolis Association of Baptist Women president, Mrs. Chase Johnson, Mrs. Eugene Adams and Mrs. L. C. Trent. Mrs. Trent is to conduct a mission study class. Mrs. P. J. Mann Hammond. Ind., is to preside at all sessions. The meeting for Baptist women in Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia is to review missionary activities of the past year, and will outline work for the coming year. WRITER EXPLAINS FACE TREATMENT If you look a little faded and feel your face does not seem to belong in the same picture with your new spring outfit, maybe your complexion needs some special care, says Ruth Murrin, beauty editor of Good Housekeeping. A salon facial is a pleasant way to brighten up. But if your budget won t allow this luxury, you can repeat the salon routine at home and do very well. Use a cieansing cream and then a liquid freshener. The first is to soften makeup and pick up grime which you then whisk off with facial tissues; the second, removes the last traces of oil and rouses the skin to action. Then stroke on tissue cream, plenty around the eyes and over any lines. Let it stay on awhile. Then off it comes, and in its place goes the new type of cream mask. Lie down for 20 minutes and let it work. All you need do then is clean off the mask and put on a glowing powder and your most becoming lip and eye beautifiers.
MAY DANCE SET FORATHENAEUM Chi Delta Sigma Fraternity's annual May dance is to be held at the Athenaeum rathskellar Saturday night, The committee includes Jerry Adney. chairman: Robert Manion, George Daniels, Rudy Scheib. Ray Edmondson and James Currens. Cleans Lamp Shades Did you know that you could remove the dust from lamp shades—yes, even the silk, plaited ones—by using the small circular dusting brush included in your set of electric cleaning tools? First, be sure that the brush is clean. Then just attach it to the extension tube of your electric cleaner and turn the current on. Move it slowly over the lamp shade, using downward strokes. Gives Fashion Tips Carmel Snow, editor of Harper'* Bazaar, during a recent NBC broadcast, warned her feminine listener* to attack the fashion question according to their own dictates rather than those of the style arbiters. Women, she said, should adapt fashions to their own personal advantage instead of madly trying to adapt themselves to eve’y new style
