Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1936 — Page 6

Mrs. Roosevelt

- Wants to Live |:

Much as Usual

Busy Schedule Is Ahead,

With Vacation at Campobello.

BY RUBY BLACK United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 3. — Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt today an-

nounced- she will take no part in|

the coming Presidential campaign.

~ Bhe is not to, however, let her “non-| " participation” policy interfere with | %

‘her “general education” acquired by visiting Federal projects. She will make no campaign speeches, she said, not even for Rep. Caroline O'Day, New York, whom she stumped the state two years ago. Mrs. Roosevelt said she believes Mrs. O'Day’s rgcord will constitute her campai this year. The First Lady will accompany the President on his campaign trip, if he makes one, but so far as her own part in the campaign is concerned she said: “As far as I know, I'm going to do exactly as I usually do. I'm going to see as much as I possibly can of anything within reach so as to know about things I have not seen and do not know about.

No Campaign Speeches

“I am not going to make any campaign speeches. “I shall, as far as possible, try to see WPA projects, Youth Administration projects, and state and Federal institutions—the type of things I always have tried to see-and know about. That's good general education.” She is to accompany the President on his Virginia trip this week-end and is to leave here at midnight Monday for Hyde Park. ' She is to see a Youth Administration camp at Bear Mountain Park, N. Y., July 8. Thursday, she is to speak at the opening of the summer teachers’ course at Columbia University, New York City.

No More Press Conferences

On July 14, she is to receive the secretaries of state who are to visit

- Hyde Park on their return from

their meeting in Albany, N. Y. She plans to remain in Hyde Park until July 20, when she will start for the Roosevelt summer home at Campobello in her car, to meet the President and his sons at the end of the New England cruise. She plans to spend most of August at Hyde Park, and does nob expect to be back in Washington for any considerable period until after election. She announced also that she will hold no further press conferences until after elections.

COUPLE TO LIVE IN WOODRUFF PLACE

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Dafoe, married Tuesday, on the twenty-first wedding anniversary of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jess Coulter, Linton, are to live at 617 East-dr, Woodruff Place. The bride is the former Miss Helen Coulter. Mr. Dafoe is a son-of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dafoe, Linton. The ceremony was read at the First Methodist Church in Linton, with the Rev. E. M. McKown officiating. Miss Marian Hagaman was maid of honor and Victor Lefebvre best man.

for.

From

5

BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Times Fashion Editor

LITTLE bit independent in the face of mounting temperatures is this carefree frock which stands ready for you whenever you are

ready for it.

It’s an informal runabout-town two-piece number in a novelty crown rayon. The fabric is washable and woven with multi-colored nubs in a plaid effect. Bargains-in-the-wear are the only bargains that don’t cheat.

A synthetic material like this can stand punishment by degrees without wilting like a folded lily, and its

cost is negligible. Cleanliness is next to chic. That's why simple all-day dresses that are washable and cool are: sleek: winners for melting weather. Not all of us can spend lazy days lolling about swimming pools and beaches. There are some of us who face the problem of looking smart at our offices and on the street in our daily rounds of duty and it behooves us to have a wardrobe of ever-ready-

tennis is your game—or if you've learned the cool comfort of a shorts-and-skirt outfit—you won't even consider going through the summer without dress No. 8803. The shorts are made on a yoke and pleated. The sleeveless blouse has two pockets, so you can’t lose your handkerchief or locker key. Patterns are sized 12 to 20 and 30 to 40. Size 14 needs 5 yards of 35-inch material for the ensemble. Blouse and shorts require 3 yards. The skirt alone requires 2! yards. Gingham, pique, seersucker or crash are recommended. To secure a PATTERN and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUC-

TIONS, fill out the coupon below. The 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 ad-

_ ditional 10 cents with the coupon. 1 _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES, TODAY'S PATTERN BUREAU.

7

214 W. Maryland-st, Indianapolis. ‘Inclosed is 15 cents in coin for

¢ Pattern I ee BlBe..... 000m erss

: : ; Sd Name SOLINNNIONINNNNGINRNERSERIRERRIRRINS Address. .....cec0vse000e

9”

to-wear-tomorrow types of clothes like this. ” ” » HERE'S a clean-cut look about Panama hats and this lass who is laughing off the heat finds hers practical to wear several days out of every week with her printed piques, uncrushable linens and sparkling white suits. Cotton gloves help keep hands from perspiring too much and on the hottest day on record one could shed the Ascot scarf and use it for mopping the face, if the worst comes to the worst.

Good to Eat

ODAY 1 shall give you a list of salads, all of them easy to make. Vegetable salad combination and fruit salads, too. Not all of them are ney combinations, but I think the list may be useful as a reminder of simple salads in case you forget how many combinations there can be.

VEGETABLE SALAD COMBINATION

Combination Salad—Combine tomato wedges, sliced cucumber, onion and green pepper rings, marinate. Serve on lettuce or tossed in a bowl with a good garlic French dressing. Of course, you know of this combination, but nine chances out of 10 you forget to add the onions. Green. Vegetable Salad—Combine cooked string beans, waxed beans and new peas, diced cucumber and minced onion, marinate and serve on lettuce. with French dressing. Chiffonade Salad—Combine cubes

| of cooked beets, riced hard-cooked

eggs and minced onion, marinate and serve on crisp romaine with mayonnaise. Canned Vegetable Salad—Combine canned asparagus tops, French peas, diced carrots and marinate, serve on lettuce with sour cream

for time.

FRUIT SALAD COMBINATIONS Waldorf Salad—This is an old

diced and chopped walnut meats; ‘mix with a cooked salad dressing. Banana Salad—Serve sliced bananas on crisp romaine with raspberry mayonnaise (recipe below). . Florida Salad—Serve grapefruit and orange sections, free from membrané on crisp watercress with French dressing (no garlic or onion). Summer Fruit Salad—Serve strawberries and diced fresh pineapple or blackberries and sliced fresh peaches on crisp lettuce with lemon mayonraise, cooked dressing or French

Remember these fruit salads are primarily dessert salads and are not meant to accompany a meat course.

RASPBERRY MAYONNAISE

.dressing. Don’t use canned vegetables while there are fresh ones | to be had unless you are pressed |

standby, using diced apples, celery, |

- tablespoon raspberry jam or

Milk Being Given for T: B. Patients

Seventy quarts of milk daily are being given to tuberculosis patients: in Indianapolis homes, the Indianapolis Flower Mission board of directors has reported. The board met yesterday at the Fletcher Trust Co. with Mrs. David Ross presiding. Reports also were given by Mrs. James D. Ermston, hospital chairman, of the contributions for the completed mission +*tuberculosis hospital. Mrs. Ermston announced that Mr. and Mrs. Fred Noerr have given $100; Miss Nora Clark, Edinburg, $61.95. Other recent contributors were the Southeastern Union Chapel and the Sarah A. Swain W. C. T. U.

SHOWER TO HONOR MISS M. E. SLUSS

Mrs. Vance C. Hall and Mrs. David E. Sluss are to entertain Wednesday with a miscellaneous shower and bridge party honoring Mrs. Sluss’ granddaughter, Miss Mary Estelle Sluss, who is to be married July 18 to David A. Rothrock Jr., Bloomington. The party is to be given at Mrs. Hall’s home, 4117 Park-av, and is to include five tables of bridge. Appointments are to be in pink and blue. Out-of-town guests are to include the mother of the bridegroom-to-be, Mrs. David A. Rothrock Sr., Bloomington, and Miss Lillian Harris, New York City. :

Entertains Card Club

Mrs. D. T. Coleman, 532 N. Per-shing-av, entertained the Eight Star Card Club at her home today.

TRUMP LEAD

Girls Enjoying Camp Delight

Outdoor Life|

_— rr

80 Members of | Local Camp Fire Council Have Outing.

Eighty Camp Fire Girls from this city and surrounding towns in, the Indianapolis council are registered at the first camp period at Camp Delight. The camp is filled to capacity. The camp staff includes Miss Helen L. Nichols, director; Miss Mary Alice Purves, assistant director and handicraft counselor; Mrs. Kenneth Higgins, swimming counselor and clerk, and Miss Annette Hand, registered nurse. ~ Other counselors and instructors are Misses Martha Ryan, Constance Meloy, Ruth Campbell, Louise O'Hara, Evelyn King -and Betty Giffin, swimming; Mary Elizabeth Renick and Helen Potts, camp craft; Helen Taylor, nature; Esther Payne, dramatics; Jean Allen, archery; Evelyn Orcutt, puppetry; Catherine Bowsher, Bluebird leader and handicraft, and Marjorie Kaser, Bluebird leader and music counselor.

Indian Gives Instruction

Tom Nichols is horseback riding counselor; Marion Disborough is nature and woodcraft counselor, and Miss Pauline Muchenene, Kickapoo Indian, is instructor in Indian lore and bead work. : Miss Esther Payne and Miss Ruth Campbell had charge of a costume ball this week, at which awards were given Joan Campbell for the costume showing most ingenuity, Carolyn Spencer, funniest costume, and Ann Kahn, prettiest costume. Miss Mary Mather, horseback riding counselor, has been granted leave of absence while in Providence, R. I, competing in Olympic track tryouts.

Easy Exercises Found Best for Figure, Posture

BY ALICIA HART Times Special Writer Some of the very best reducing, posture and limbering-up exercises are easy to do. The days of intricate routines that made every bone and muscle ache are no more. Authorities agree that simple steps, done slowly, are more effective and a good deal better for the disposition and psace of mind. For instance, nothing could be easier than the roll exercise to re-

duce hips and thighs. You simply

lie on the floor with arms at your sides, then, keeping the right leg

“perfectly flat and the knee of the

left quite straight, cross left leg over right, slowly lifting it higher until it forms a right angle with your body. Relax and repeat with the right leg. Notice how this stretches and pulls waistline and hip muscles. Do it 20 times a day for one month and you will see a difference in the size of your hips and the lumps on the outside of your legs. To slenderize the waistline and to give your figure grace, stretching routines are recommended. Simply stand before an open window, lift up your arms and stretch. Keep on stretching until you seem to feel that you actually have lifted your torso upward away from your hips. Bend slowly to the right, to the left, slightly backward, then forward. When you walk, think of yourself as a taller person than you actually are. Don’t let the upper part of your body sag downward to rest on your hip bones. Keep yourself pulled upward. Swing from the hips with each step.

GUESTS WELCOMED BY HERMAN ARNDTS

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Arndt are to have as week-end guests their son, Eric M. Arndt and Mrs. Arndt, and Mrs. Olive Hansen, Milwaukee, Wis. “ They are to have their daughter, Mrs. M. Foster Tiddlie and small son, Eric; Mrs. Arndt’s mother, Mrs. Henry Muesse; her sisters, Misses Katherine and Ida Muesse, and her aunt, Mrs. Clinton Swearer, all of Baltimore, Md., as guests for several

weeks. ;

STOPS GAME

Today’s Contract Problem |

By optimistic bidding, South |! arrived at a contract of seven |' clubs. There are two possible losing tricks. One can be picked up by a finesse. What line of play will produce the necessary 13th trick?

OK9 SdAQI07542 None vul. Opener—b 3. Solution in next issue. 28

Solution to Previous Contract Problem

Dealer

AAKQJ ¥ None ®A108764 $953

Duplicate—All vul.

Pass 44 Opening lead—b K.

Delma Vestal, daughter of Mr. and

penter officiating. :

—Photo by Plowman-Platt.

Mrs. C. F. Rohm (above), before her recent marriage, was Miss

Mrs. George K. Vestal, 53 N. Bolton-

av. Mr. and Mrs. Rohm are to be at home in Cleveland after tomorrow. The marriage was performed at a candlelight ceremony in the Irvington Presbyterian Church June 13, with the Rev. Guy O. Car-

If you have lines in your face, a general expression of fatigue and constantly are possessed of “that tired feeling,” it may not be due to a lack of vitamins, but to the wrong type of arch in your shoes. Beauty of face and ill-fitting shoes are not synonymous and the majority of women do not realize how they jeopardize facial charm by. not paying enough attention to comfortable footwear. According to authorities, you are as Yyoungappearing and healthy as your arches, and a shoe with an arch of the wrong height is enough to mar any one’s perspective of life. There are three distinct types of ‘arches—high, medium and low—and each demands a corresponding arch curve in the shoe for perfect comfort and well-being. The shoe which comfortably fits the high arch-curve definitely will be painful to the low arched foot. And, a low arch-curve shoe which

fits the flat foot, logically will not support the arch of the foot with a high arch-curve and, in all probability, will be uncomfortable as well. The normal or medium arch, however, gets all the breaks, by usually adapting itself to either a high or low arch-shoe. It is well

Arch-Fitting Shoe May Bring an End to “That Tired Feeling’

though, to fit such a foot to its own special arch-curve. To “know your arches” is a prerequisite in selcting comfortable and well-fitted shoes. And, it follows, if your feet are “happy” and comfortable, the contented expression is reflected in your face.

STOCKMAN STAFF TO FETE COUPLE

The Stockman Studios’ faculty is to entertain with a studio party tonight honoring Mr. and Mrs Sherman McClean. Before her marriage June 28, Mrs. McClean was Miss Mary Gordon Perkins, a member of the Stockman faculty. Louis Stockman is to be host, assisted by Misses Dorothy Kizer, Ednora Johnson, Mildred Peters, Mrs. May W. Clark, Manford Shelburne, Glenn Carr and Floyd Beaman, : :

Monograms Are Smart

It still is smart to have your monogram on your bag. Anything goes from the tiny block letters to elongated types in English script. New and exciting is a monogram made entirely of musical notes.

They have

Bouquets Add ~ Color in July

Varied Arrangements Bring Out Best in Blossoms.

« Summer garden flowers should fill the home with their colorful array

of blossoms in July.

Zinnias, with their many pink,

rose, orange, yellow and autumn cole oxs, are favorites. Straight stems with formally designed blossoms atop them provide unlimited scope for arrangements. They are interesting in themselves, with their sun-burnt complexions, and you can pick them up almost any way, put them in & small vase, decoration.

and have attractive The lovely astérs with their deli

cate colors and myriad of petals are

one of the most satisfactory cut

flowers. They are grown almost as

large as chrysanthemums nowadays, and their straight stems and hand= some leaves make them easy to handle. = : :

Gladioli for Bouquets

The huge spikes of gladioli in ale most every color make fine bouquets for the living room, or any place where < they will have sufficient space. Place a large bunch on the sun porch in a wicker basket, which has a metal container inside for water. Cosmos, especially the new brile liant orange variety, is good matere ial to combine with other flowers. bushy nature which makes themdery pliable in arrange ing. Gailardias, with their neat de= sign and vari-colored petals, make dainty nosegays for street wear. Two sparklers with tiny florets borne in umbrella-like stem clusters are the verbena and Sweet Williams. The annual phlox is another vividly colored member of this tribe, Use * them alone in a small bowl or come bine with other flowers. For delicate coloring and fine texe ture the annual larkspur is excellent this time of year. It looks well alone or in combination with other flowers. Two fragrant favorites are the mighonette and sweet alyssum. Combine them with other flowers for their fragrance. Calendulas and marigolds in yellows and oranges complete the summer picture of gare den flowers.

COLOR CONTRASTS COMING THIS FALL

Color contrasts are frequent and unusual in fashion’s forecast for fall. Among the most interesting are yellow-green with wood violet, royal blue with black, chestnut with capu= Sine and spruce green with Chinese red. In Paris, Piquet likes violet over rose. In London, Victor Stiebel ace cents royal blue with red and green, Lucile Paray combines purple and sky blue and purple and red. Lelong likes old rose with wine £ suits. Marcel Rochas combines N green and violet,

CAMPBELL-GRAHAM NUPTIAL DATE SET

Miss Janet Graham is to be the only attendant of her sister, Miss Helen Virginia Graham, July 17, when the latter is married to Howe ard Gilbert Campbell, in the. Bethe lehem Lutheran Church. Miss Graham is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Graham, 5268 Park-av, and Mr. Campbell is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Campbell, 29 N. Hawthorne-In.

Pot Plant Cheerful

One of the most cheerful sights on a porch is -@ pot plant suspended on a wire or metal bracket from the wall. Any of the trailing plants; and many others, will serve this purpose.

Plants “Need Washing”

House plants with large, solid leaves should be washed with a

damp cloth every few weeks to ree

- move dust.

Which shall it be . . . the Dutch Cold Plate or the tempting fruit plate? One or the other will surely intrigue your appetite on Saturday or Sunday when you dine at the

. TEL. This is my jdea (and it can be yours) of the way to a completely satisfying If and when guests ar-

Unusual sweets from Florida —calomondin marmalade, papaya, or mint with orange, and even kumquat preserves.

2 = =

Seersucker robes are. valu.

aN i 5 ll f| I (Ud ii | d i

Here's a giant flashcracker just ready to invade your, happy home . . . but I just had to attract attention what with all the noise and “bombs bursting in air.” Hopé you go skyrocketing to a grand Fourth of July , . . and finish with a bang. : I have a very good idea tha when you come back to town after the two-day celebration . . . the shops will have all “sales” aloft! More news next week. But, _always at your shopping service, -

ul and cool with a large brim

that ties under your chin. And which folds flatly away

Refresh, repair, and refine your complexion before and after your holiday in the open air. Merle Norman cosmetics will put your skin in ‘such excellent, normal cone dition that you can face the world contentedly. Now, even if you not have her wonderful powder. for scientific protection . . . you can get some before your next ion, If, on Monday,

ty Salon, 820 Lemcke Bldg. Mrs. Mercuri advise the proper of a lovely skin and complexion “the Merle Norman Way.” Her treatments are without or obligation. Just phone RI-5233 for an appointment.

If you fancy curios from the Indian Trading Posts in

beaded doll for good

charm.

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