Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1938 — Page 7
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WEDNESD, Y, MARCH 30, 10% Going Out for Scrub Team
Local Clubs To De orate Home Show
Flowers in cl Sonia] Motif To ‘Be Planted at Exh, Dit. :
Sakina artic’~ and commercial éxhibitors. may. crate “Home Con‘sciousness”: with: olue prints and building materia’: at the Indianapolis Home Sho: but local garden devo will “sg: it with flowers.” Impatiently gergsn club members await the completion of landscaping in the Williamsb':mg theme by Frits Loonstein and his assistants on - Thursday afterngon and Friday morning they wil! invade the Manufacturer’s build: ag at the State Fair, Grounds 8 place carefully nurtured and forced plants in gardens’ designed i7om Rockefeller regearsh records 211d pictures of early ia gardens. The show opens Fricay and wil] continue for 10
“The pit of the building is quickly |
being transfor, pd into a copy of the famous Iike of Gloucester
Street in. the che-time capital. of |
colonial Virginig. - Its centerpiece will be a model “williamsburg home. Before it extend; the street, bordered by trees, whose pranches will form an ‘overhead arch. ng it stands reproduced store and cottage fronts. Behind the horie are the “backyard” gardens, | barn and tool shed.
12 Clubs ‘Participating’
Twelve gard-y clubs are participating in this Tvear’s show. The newest the Giden Glow Garden Club, has beer: organized only three
. months, but i's members are pre-|
paring a fruit? garden with quite a professional a; 3 Mrs. O. L. I Tayes, chairman, and ~ her! assistants] Mrs. O. C. Stewart, ~ Sumner. Stew'rd and W. W. Vauter, have waithed the forced trees | and bushes -t the Garfield Park hot houses. |" [ith a prgud eye they will point t strawberry plants in _ bloom and | “Yrefully-pruned apple trees. For | ix weeks the plants ‘have been lifoced from nursery growth to piikent a late spring and summer apgtarance. Also on exhibit will baiplum and peach trees and raspbgiry, gooseberry and blackberry Jushes from the fruits ‘of which colonial dames concocted confitures. The Inc -chase a Pi
-napolis Garden Club 5-Dixon garden for reproduction. It will be a formally stylized plo. composed of box and 7h tullips, myrtle, and h rubs. Mrs. Benjamin D. he club’s committee, asIrs. J. C. Richey and Mrs. . Failey. Vard Reproduced
An infanr; play yard and an old 1 graced many a colo_nial horhe’: backyard. The Brookside Gard: Club will provide a white fencs eg plot with a sand box for childrery and three small gardens will surround the old wellhead. Anoth ar feature will be a de- - vice over “iaich rugs were thrown for beating and cleaning. Mrs. Har.eld Hayes, chairman, is assisted by Mrs. Edwea? 5 Katzenberger and Mrs. C. E. Lucas. Next to a store front on the street will stand a simulated py cottage front with white trim. its windows will be dotted swiss . tains hung by members of the Arbutus Garden Club. Gardens “fo beat the Dutch” will feature a wooden bench and pump. Members | have painted them a dark, forest green. ‘Tulips of - course will be prominer’ in the plants, as in any Holland-influenced garden. Pansies,. daisies, larkspur and delphini- | um also vill be used. Near the end of the street will be a garden wall gate. The carefully planed beds of tulips, pansies and foriet-me-nots will be the work of the Emerson Grove Garden Club members. The budded plants d:2 watched closely in their hot bed: by Mrs. O. R. Stevens, chairmar, Mesdames J. W. Walter, N. R. He:nphill and John Olsen. Bhe Emerson Grove Junior Garden Club wil! sponsor a vegetable garden. ’ Rustic Tool House
{A mor2 masculine note is to be provided by ianapolis Men's Garden Club. Under the direction of E. E. Mc ay, the club has planned a propagating garden. In
a s germina ‘ing in an electric hot bed
will be = feature. A’cutting bed has :
also beea prepared. An English street wouldn't be complet: without!a tea house with a terrace; ‘say the members of the raén department of the Woman’s parfraént Club. A delicate iron fence v a enclose the terrace. Beds f myriie, geraniums and narcissus will delizht the sense of smell. Mrs. Paul T Rochford heads the com mittee, assisted by Mesdames Merritt G. Woolf, Ralph Thompson and - Peter C Reilly. : | At the opening. of the: street stands a white cottage front. Before th= entrance the Spade "and wel Garden Club members “are planning flower beds with white and ye'low predominating: Assisting Mrs. Raymond. Toler, chairman, are Mesdaries Dean Stubbs, Garvin [Stump and Irving Palmer.
Cutting Garden Planned
"| Mrs. E. D. Parsons of the North End Carden Club states that the members are interested in flower {arrangements to brighten nooks and lcrannizs as well ‘as dining tables. |She and her committee, Mrs. J. R. /Spaulcing, W. W. Seagle and | Charl s S. Wiltsie, are preparing a cuttin: garden for the club. A copy ‘of a Williamsburg garden, the plot {will jriclude tulips and snapdragons {and the old-fashioned colonial bou- | quet = -sandbys, bleeding hearts, lilacs
: a and forget-me-nots.
The Neophyte Garden Club will | prepa e a perennial border. Mrs. Russell Viet is chairman. Marigold | Gard:-n Club members are planning | a gree arbor. Mrs. Lawrence Earle is ch:irman. ;
| Miss Paula Meinzen' To Wed Here Easter
| © T= Rev. and Mrs. W. C. Meinzen, | 1224 Laure 1 sSt.,, announce the en-
alph G. Bernecker, son of Mr.
|-and Mrs. R. J. Bernecker, Saginaw, |
the Emmaus - the bri ’s
house during spring vacation this “cleaned. .
dry cleaning.
York as do in smaril towns. Anything over a two-alarm fire
friends know of this staid doctor’s general public, he is a successful physician whose specialty is pneumonia. Whenever he and his wife make a dinner engagement, she prays there will be no fires around that hour. Mrs. Harry Archer, the wife of Dr. Archer of 47 W. 85th St., shares this feeling. But she’s given up hope of competing with a fire, She hurries her husband off, knowing by experience it's the
simplest method. Dr. Archer keeps
a special fire ambulance waiting outside his house. As soon as a twoalarm fire sounds, he hops in the car and clangs away. While the main reason for going to a fire on the part of both Dr. Archer and Dr. Stillman is to see it{/ they also help professionally and have Savedjiine lives of several firemen. :
Stockbroker Menfred Neumoegen and William Conran, a wealthy retired standpipe manufacturer, run
‘Today’s Pattern
Some like it long, some like it short (8121 is perforated in two lengths, so you .can take your choice) but: everybody likes this charmingly simple type of dance frock in’ organdy, dimity, dotted Swiss or chiffon. The saving you make<by sewing your own dance frocks will buy you twice as many for what you spend. ‘The full skirt and the full short sleeves flutter delightf as you dance.. The square yoke and the flower are flatering. ey should contrast with the frock, brown on buttercup yellow, for instance, or deep green on violet. The dance frock is easy to make. | A detailed
| sew chart comes with your pattern.
Pattern 8121 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 5% yards of 39-inch material in full length. In short length 4%
mae nent of their daughter, Paula, | yards, without’ nap. Three yards FE
grosgrain ribbon is required for the To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern num : g -and
to fires purely for the excitement. |.
Times Photo.
Brawn replaces brains at the Butler University Alpha Omicron Pi
week. Six local coeds have tucked
* their page-boy bobs into dust caps and proceeded to go out for the scrub. team, especially in the front yard, where the living room rug was
“It 's “Rousecleaning time in the Rockies,” according to Rosalea, Schey, who perched on the mantle 19 give Jenny Lind a semi-annual
SEEING NEW YORK
They Run to as Many Fires In the Big Town as We-Do Here
By HELEN WORDEN Times Special Writer -
NEW YORK, March 30.—Just as many people run to fires in New
will bring out shy Dr. Ernest Still-
man, plump middle-aged brother of banker James Stillman. A private alarm box that rings all fires is installed in his elaborate home at 35 BE 75th St. Few outside of his family, the servants and more intimate small boy passion for fires. To the
Garnish
Their interest in them has won both the title of Honorary Fire Chief. They wear gold badges. of office and attend all the more important fire department functions. The worst fits today are in the ancient red brick buildings on the lower East Side, known as old law tenements. The rooms swarm with people. The dark halls are glutted by rubbish and the only possible means of escape, in case of fire, are narrow windows cluttered by junk. Eight lives were lost in a midnight fire that swept one of these tenements recently. These tenements were the principal cause of 28,145 fires in New York in 1937.
EJ & ” The last horse to be used in the New York Fire Department was mournfully retired by Engine House 205 in 1902. The men cried when they said goodby to Jim, a noble white horse with a beautiful flowing mane and tail, who had raced to thousands of fires. Engines may have replaced the horses, but they didn’t change the status of the black and. white Dalmatian coach dogs which guard every New York. fire station. Perched on top of a scarlet hook and ladder truck, or sitting up front on the engine wagon, they still race through the city streets with their firemen friends, barking excitedly as they go.
GARDENING
Now’s the Time to Roll Your Lawn, if It’s Dry Enough.
(Sixth of a Series) . By DONALD GRAY Times Special Writer ; HE first signs of spring in any urban community are the liming and rolling of lawns. The use of lime is now in disfavor and when the roller is used at a time when the ground is too wet or too dry much harm can be done. Lawns need attention each spring but each one is a separate problem. If there is ‘good depth of soil, but so many weeds that it is impossible to dig them up, put on an application of nitrate of soda,
‘which will kill all the weeds and |
grass, but will add fertility to the soil. Turn under the dead plants
: {and proceed to make a new lawn.
If there are patches of good grass and patches of weeds, burn out or dig up the weeds, put on some screened topsoil and commercial plant food and sow grass. seed. If the lawn had a good growth last year then give it the following treatment to keep it good this year.
® ”» 2 : RASS seed can be sown before . the frost is out of the ground. The seed will fall into the porous crevices and will germinate in warm weather. ; The lawn needs rolling when the frost, is out, but be sure a later frost will nol heave up the roots again. The way to tell when to roll a lawn is to wallt’on it. If the foot-
"print sinks in the ground and water | stays in the depression do not. roll. When he grou 1s Waist, mot too |.
wet or too dry, then
Give a lawn plant! food each spring. Avoid cattle . manure be- | cause of the introduction of weed |
seeds. Apply & commercial ferti-
lizer made up of 12 per. cenf nitro-
gen, 6 per -cent phosphoric. acid,
and 4 per cent potash. Use: at the |
Iie of 5 pounds per 1000 ee Sow a good variety of lawn seed at the rate of 2 to
Pineapples | Make Good "To onic Salad
Fi i £ t h Avénue: Beauty Salon. Recommends Them For Slenderness. 1
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX | Pineapples like ‘to travel.
‘them north, set: them down in a spring garden, and salad days A
here- again.
For a somplete spring . “tonic:
luncheon - for the - connoisseur serve this plate. . The recipe comes from a Fifth Ave. beauty salon in New York, where- so-called “food . for beauty” is served to clients seeking more slenderness and: lighter spirits,
Tropical Dawn
* (Serves 4)
‘One: fresh, pineapple, 8 8 fresh dates, 1 pint Surawberties blanched almonds, 1 green pepper, 8 crisp lei-
tuce cups, 1 carrot, % pound fresh:
lima beans; . 4 firm buds of : cauliflower, 1 zucchini, % of a summer squash, 8 cream cheese balls with chopped pistachio nuts and minced fresh tarragon. “Cut pineapple into quarters, from stem to base.- Cut out pineapple, leaving shell. Cut pineapple inio small cubes. Cut fresh dates info small pieces, slice strawberries, leaving a few whole: for a garnish. Chop green pepper, caulifiower and lima beans. Grate carrot and summer squash and zucchini.
Arrange quarter of pineapple in
‘center - of - large salad plate. Pile lightly ‘with ' mixture of ‘pineapple |
cubes, dates and sliced: strawberries. th whole strawberries, studded w blanched almonds. At} one end, make a small pile of vivid green. peppers. Place a lettuce cup: on each sthie | of pineapple and fill lightly with
chopped and grated vegetables. ‘Place two cheese: alls on- egelt plate. :
THE INDIANAPOLIS
_|ing the 1
Bring | a {37th -St., was burned about the face,
; tary of the Pennsylvania Govef:
PAGE 7
On iden! shofSr pe at
year-old boy. was scalded. in.min : accidents here. ov ‘3 | Foster, 30, of HE Ww. 10th st, shot | himself in the hand while handling a pistol on a.streetcar at + Sola Ave. and 13th 86 : ; Ed "Hall, special ; * who ‘was riding in the ¢ car at. the time, arrested Foster on charge of violat=935 firearms act and-shoot-ing pin Es ong - City. limits.
Vivian Kinneer, 24, of 1055 Ww
hands and arms when a pan of grease burst into flames in her home last ‘night. « George G. Smith, 12; of 825 BE. 21st St., received minor burns when a pan So scalding ‘water he was carrying § ‘tipped and spilled: over hh nds: ©
Fred T. ‘Greene, , president of th Federal- Home Loan Bank of In. dianapolis, today had been‘ notified: of his appointment as: a member of the Federal Savings and Loan Committee of ‘the U.S. Building and Loan: League. for: 1938. :
Club. today had ®lécted the following officers: H. C. Atkins Sr., honorary president; Noble Springer, president; William Strack, vice pres= ident; L. Z. Beckwith, treasurer; C. A, Newport, secretary; William A. Weaver, assistant secretary. Seventeen new members were admitted at the club’s 32d Annual Business Cpl at the Severin Hotel Satur-
Paul ne Dogan professor ‘of ‘economics at the University.of Chicago, ‘is ‘to -conclude- the Indian--apolis Open. Forum series at Kirsh-: ‘baum Community Center at 8:15| Pp. m. Sunday. He isto lecture “Controlling Business Depressions.” .Prof.: Douglas has acted as seereor’s Commission “on Unemployment, ‘economics: adviser to the ‘New York commission: and as a member of the Illinois: Housing Commission. He is
Add French .dres
the author’ of ‘a number of .books
buried fariogely by gtease and a 12. subjects.
_ Atkins: Pioneers 20 Year Service|:
NG THE
on. es glodabtt: Wages: unemment insurance and related
a. 30-day’ miembership' drive, Roy Fox, newly: » elected sient, anTonnced,
1 Barnard tes. Civie gto eader campaign for a ‘Whiite River ‘flood | conizal,program, has nearorared as ‘t North +| White River Club. D. Nickel, president; Ben ‘Hunter,
vice president, and Carl Greenwgod, SECTETaLY HHUASII
© Four Federal agincies which’ have salvaged ‘thousands ‘of homes ahd established a vast, permanent: credit ‘reservoir fort home ‘financing, will have exhibits in the annual Indianapolis Home Show which opens Frie|day at the Fair Grounds: Manuface turers Building, They.are ‘the Fed‘eral Home Loan Bank Board, the Fecleral Home ‘Loan: Bank System, the Federal Savings'& Loan Insurance: Corp., and: the Home owners | Loan Corp.
“Blologlesl Aspects of) Marriage” is to be the: topic of an address ‘by Dr. ‘Thurran B. Rice of the State Bureau of Health, at 8 p. m. Friday at the VY. M. C. A..7It is to be the third in a series of six discussions on the subject, “Anticipating Marriage.”
The Indiana Milk Control Board yesterdey failed to take action on the petition of Indianapolis distributors asking a. reduction of the price. now paid ‘producers “for milk of 4 per cént butterfat content. Indianapolis Dairies asked ‘that the $2.54 per Inidreqwelghi now paid farmers be’ reduced to $2.42,
The Indianapolis Liederkranz’ Shoal bock beer festival is to be held Saturday night ‘at the hall, 1417 E. Washington ‘St. Charles E. Hess, vice president, jis to be master | of ceremonies.
The Knights of Columbus Lunch-
are Vincent Farrell, vice president;
. Officers are 'M. |
CITY
Troy presigent, Other new officers Joseph Culligan, secretary-treasur-er; Francis Schmids, sergeant-at-arms,
Two Shortridge ‘High School debating teams are to take part in the finals of the te debating contest Friday and Saturday at Manchester College, North Manchester, Richard Morrish is captain of the negative squad, and Arthur Northrup of the affirmative.
“Women missionaries have not abandoned hope for a future of usefulness in the-Orient,” according to Miss Melvina Soliman, a Baptist missionary in East China. She told the Indianapolis Association of Baptist Women that. the ionaries are striving to continue their ideals without prejudice toward the Japanese. Mrs. Royal McClain was named association president, succeeding Mrs. Asa E, Hoy.
Bel-Rose-Civie. League members| today were on record as opposing the establishment by Indianapolis Railways Inc. of a “feeder” . bus line which would. loop the territory across the Monon Railroad between 46th and 52d ‘Sts. and - Keystone Ave. »
Men of Speedway Methodist Church and Eighth Christian Church will present a minstrel show tomorrow night and Friday at School 5, 14th St. and Belle Vieu
of ceremonies. ‘Others on the program will be Dale Littrell, Chester
Charles Swartz and’ ‘Dewey Laue. Kiwanis Club. members, observ-
School pupils presenting an act from their recent play, “Ripples of 1938,” at a luncheon today at the Columbia Club.
R. A. Kirkpatrick, traveler, lecturer
Boulder Dam and illustrate with motion pictures, at a luncheon-
Place. on auik 15 10 he master]
Plank, Ray Cauble, Robert Patrick.
ing boys’ and girls* day, were enter= tained by 25 Broad . Ripple High
Lions Club members today heard |
and writer, describe construction. of |
PETITION REQUESTS
“BUS LINE EXTENSION
_ Forty-seven residents living in the vicinity of Arlington Ave. and the Brookville Road today asked the Indiana Public Service Commission to order an extension of the New YorkUniversity Bus Line. ‘This line, operated by Indianapolis Railways, Inc, now terminates at Arlington and University Aves.
‘The requested extension would take
it to Arlington Ave. and the Brooke ville Road. The petition pointed out that the International Harvester Co. is building a large plant in that vicinity and would require Iransporiation service for its workers.
ee eae e———— GARBO DRIVES NORTH ASSISI, Italy, March 30 (U. P.), —Greta Garbo and Leopold Stokowski, were believed to be en route to Vienna today. They left here yesterday by automobile. ;
New Under-arm
Cram Doadorant safely Stops Perspiration
“ Does not rot dresses == does not irritate skin. 2. No waiting to dry. 3. Canbe used after shaving. - 4. Instantly stops perspira- - tion 1 to 3 days——removes odor from perspiration. 5. A pure, white, greaseless, ‘stainless vanishing cream,
ARRID
‘eon Club ‘has named Edward J.
“Firs 17's st for refreshing mildness | — first for pleasing taste and aroma that smokers. like only cigarette about which smokers say “They Satisfy #
The mild ripe obaccos~iiomegrown and aromatic Turkish —and the pure cigarette paper used in Chesterfields are the 3 best ingredients a cigarette can
Ieciing 2 at Hotel Washington.
39¢ a jar at drug and dept. stores
JV —
Weekly Radio Features’ GRACE MOORE | ANDRE KOSTELANETZ \, PAUL WHITEMAN DEEMS TAYLOR PAUL DOUGLAS
