Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 June 1939 — Page 21

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FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1939

Red, White and Blue Motif Popular for Beach and Street Wear

‘Altrusa Club's 1939-40 Aids Are Selected

New Committees Assume Duties With Opening Of Fall Season.

Standing committees for the Altrusa Club of Indianapolis were named today for the 1939-40 club year. Committee members will * assume their duties in the fall. They include: ' Vocational Information—Katherine Mertz, chairman; Mabel Guttery, board member; Gladys Alwes, Janice Berline, Marian Gallup, Minnie Hardegen, Cordelia Hoeflin, Bertha Leming and Nellie Young. Membership — Lois Anderson, | chairman; Lucetta Schwomeyer board member; Jessie Bass, Lenore Frederickson, Emma Garrett, Cleo ! Kinnaman, Marie Matuschka, Ruth McNutt, Blanche Mitchell, Mary Rigg and Mamie Larsh.

Ways and Means Group

" Ways and Means—Mary Ann Fitzsimons, chairman; Gladys Alwes, board member; Lucy Branch, Helen Brown, Amy Colescott, Edith Dickover, Cordelia Hoeflin, Mamie Larsh, Jo Rigler, Mary Ramsey, Ada B. Robinson, Marie Schulz and Georgianna Webber. Fellowship—Lyda Goll, chairman; Lucy Branch, board member; Lilly Clements, Lulie Gibbons, Jessie Jolly, Helena Patterson and Minnie 4 Springer. + Autrusan News-Flash — Mamie . Bass, chairman; Edna Fields, board { member; Mary Dickson, Anna Hammerbeck and Katherine Mertz. Education—Laura Holden, chairman; Elizabeth Boyle, board member; Mabel Guttery, Bertha Metzger and Mary Meyers. . Constitution and Bylaws—Ella Groninger, chairman; Edith Dickover, board member; Charlotte Carter and Mamie Larsh.

Public Affairs Unit

Public Affairs — Nellie chairman; Bertha Metzger, member; Mary Dickson, Mary Ellen Willis and Elizabeth Boyle. Budget — Lucetta Schwomeyer, Mabel Guttery and Edith Haynes. Publicity—Lilly Clements, chairman; Lenore Frederickson, board member; Mary Meyers, Edith Dickover and Edith Haynes. Nonpartisan Public Affairs for Women—Marian Gallup, chairman; Edith Haynes, board member; Mary Dye Beach, Eunice Johnson and Ella Groninger. International Relations — Ora Shepherd. chairman; Marie Schulz, board member; Mary Dye Beach, Vera Morgan, Margaret Hiles and . Mary Rigg. Directs All Programs

Hazel P. Williams is general program chairman for the new club vear. She will be assisted by program committees for the four quarters of the year. They include: First quarter, July, August and September— Mary Ramsey, chairman; Edith Haynes, Margaret Hiles, Cleo Kinnaman, Marie Matuschka and Marguerite Malarky. Second quarter, October, November and December—Charlotte Carter, chairman; Helen Brown, Lulie Gibbons, Minnie Hardegen, Elsie Miller, Blanche Mitchell, Helena Patterson, Mary Perrott, Jo Rigler and Mary Ellen Willis. Third quarter, January, February and March — Vera Morgan, chairman: Martha Abel, Nan Bryan, Jessie Jolly, Ruth McNutt and Georgianna Webber. Fourth quarter, April, May and June Minnie Springer, chairman; Minnie Foley, Lydia Goll, Laura Holden, Bertha Leming and Ora Shepherd. House committee members also are divided into four quarters. Members of the House Committee of the first quarter include Miss Amy Colescott, chairman; Edna Fields, Ella Groninger and Lucetta Schwomeyer. Second Quarter—Ada B. Robinson, chairman; Martha Abel, Lois Anderson and Emma Garrett. Third Quarter—Lyda Goll, chairman; Jessie Bass, Minnie Foley and Elsie Miller. Fourth Quarter—Nan Bryan, chairman; Mamie Bass, Anna Hammerbeck and Mary Perrott.

Young,

3 Lawn Parties Will Be Given by Church Groups

- Three lawn fetes and plans for a Summer camp are topics of interest these days among members of several local church groups. Two of the socials have been planned for tonight, while the other will be tomorrow night. Members of the Calendar Society of the Centenary Christian Church will sponsor a lawn fete tonight at 5 o'clock. The Hugo School of Music will play.

The Fairfax Christian Church's annual summer festival and fish fry will be repeated tomorrow night on the lawn at the church, Berwick and W. North Sts. Entertainment began Tuesday.

A continuous program of entertainment will be featured at the Jawn social tonight of the Washington Street Presbyterian Church. Supper will be served from 5 to 7 p. m. The Rev. Henry E. Chase is general chairman.

Mrs. Boyd Gillespie and Miss Elizabeth Taft, Indianapolis, will be in charge of Pioneer age girls (12 to 14 years) at Camp Kosciusko on Winona Lake, Sunday to Aug. 6. * Pioneer initiation and ceremonials will be conducted by Mrs. Gillespie. Other activities include discussion, handcraft, nature study, swimming, boating, play, vespbers, campfire, orchestra, tennis and ball. A three-weeks’ camp for junior girls (9 to 11 years) will open Sunday. The camp is conducted by the Indiana Presbyterian Synod, with Dr. Robert J. McLandress as religious education director. Miss Taft i§ dean of the camp.

- How to Prevent Mold

“The housewife who likes to serve @ variety of breads at each meal finds herself faced with rapid bread spoilage when warm, damp weather arrives. If bread is wrapped in fresh

board ,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 21

JANE JORDAN-

get.

or a gambler, but I am not. haven't a job. 2

” 2

job, and to work at it incessantly.

of everything. your wife back.

proposition? over to an adequate man.

of the situation.

eventually. Well, you'll have to find more

mistreated. After all a man does

rescue. can help yourself if you will.

in this column daily.

I can’t find any work. What would you advise me to do?

to get, but don’t let that deter you. obstacles whereas others are spurred to discover capacities which they didn’t know they had. Some use tough economic conditions to excuse their own lack of aggression, whereas others surmount them in spite You'll have to get in the latter class if you want

How can she live with you if you can’t buy food? Doubtless her mother would be glad enough to turn her If you were a go-getter in temporary difficulties, your wife might have the courage to defy her family and live with you even if you had to accept charity. have an entirely different attitude toward your misfortune. I imagine that what they object to in you is a passive acceptance You're too willing to say, “I can't,” and are not resourceful encugh to win confidence in your ability to succeed

have to develop a more competitive spirit. to make an attack on life instead of beating a retreat.

EAR JANE JORDAN—I am 25 years old. My wife is 20. She left me because I didn’t have a job. As you know jobs are hard to Her mother won't let me see her. letters but I haven't got any answer. she came back to me she couldn't ever come to her home again. I wouldn't think anything about this attitude if I was a drunkard I have lived a clean life. wife and she loves me but she says she can’t live with me when I

I have written her several Her mother told her that if

I love my

C. B.

2 2 2

Answer—I advise you to concentrate all your forces on getting a

Of course jobs are scarce and hard Some people are discouraged I\

What is your

Her family might

You'll In other words you'll have Don’t feel so have to be able to support a wife

courage from some source.

before he can get one to live with him. Accept the fact that you must become a provider and that there is no one to come to your Perhaps the desire for help is what holds you back. but you

JANE JORDAN,

Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan whe will answer your questions

than those in a dry one.

The oily complexioned individual whose pores are stretched and, in addition, are filled with waste matter, may find this treatment efficacious.

Clean face thoroughly with cleansing cream. Then, using a blackhead remover or your fingertips covered with clean cotton cloth, squeeze out as much as possible of the waste in each pore. Do not squeeze too vigorously and do not try to remove all waste during the first treatment, or even the first five treatments. Now wring a wash cloth out in very hot water (as hot as hands can stand) and press it against your face. Afterward, dip a bit of clean cotton in pure grain alcohol and moisten the irritated spots. Pat on rose water and glycerin and go to bed. Repeat every other night. On nights between treatments, simply wash with soap and water until cheeks are pink. Smooth on softening lotion. On alternate nights, treatment

Enlarged Pores Can Be Cured By These Simple Treatments

By ALICIA HART The pores in an oily skin are much more likely to become enlarged In either case, however, the condition can be

cured. That is, if proper steps are taken and the treatments involved are repeated regularly and conscientiously.

for open-pored dry skin is the same as for oily skin.

However, on the nights between, softening cream should be applied after washing, allowed to remain on for an hour, then removed with cotton pads saturated with ice water, plain witch hazel or bland skin tonic. Naturally, cultivation of excellent health habits as well as attention to proper skin routines will ease the large pore situation rapidly. Get enougan sleep. Eat more green vegetables and crisp salads than greasy foods and rich desserts. And do get some exercise. Your skin can be no better than your circulation.

Mauve Favored Color

Mauve is a favorite upholstery color in the newest furniture collections. Rich beige and sage green are important, too, and all pasteis in misty, dusty tones.

FLAPPER FANNY

By Sylvia

waxed paper and stored in the|f:

refrigerator instead of the bread box. she will find that the loaf should stay fresh and unspoiled several

:34| create a charming gown that will be

| spring wallpapers are flowered, not

‘the Country Club on Saturday night.

d|peplum and bodice are accented by

These two outfits are worn by fashion wise young women. Lucille Ball, Hollywood actress, models the newest in bathing suits—white wool with a sprinkling of giant confetti in red and blue. Her hooded robe of white terry cloth is lined with red and white polka dot cotton, It fastens with buttons of the fabric. For daytime, Anna Neagle, English actress, wears the popular full-sleeved shirtwaist in a red and white candy-striped sheer with a skirt of flag blue jersey. At her waist she fastens a wide basque belt of red kid.

Summer Mood Is Put Into Home Decorations, Too

By EMILY GENAUER Times Special Writer That “little-girl” freshness fashion writers are heralding for summer, the new vogue which will deck milady in gingham checks, Breton bonnets perched high on her head with a broad ribbon descending down her back, baby blouses and even patent leather “Mary-Jane” pumps, is going to figure in summer decorating news, too. It's only natural that the starryeyed, ingenuous-looking wolnan should want a background in keepIng with her fashion mood. And she'll be all the more inclined to achieve one because, being effective only in small doses, it's all so simple. Several of the new decorating exhibits in shops incorporate suggestions that almost parallel developments in the fashion fileds. In a sophisticated, even quite formal dining room, for example, done with eighteenth-century furniture, a most sprightly, spring-like, littlegirl feeling was introduced by the use of a large gingham-type plaid taffeta as seat upholstery.

Effect in Draperies

here today. WOT contr

out on

In a bedroom in the same exhibit draperies, hung over white silk seersucker glass curtains, were made of red-and-white candy-striped taffeta, looped around a curtain pole and tied at each end in perky bows. The whole window looked as newly washed and fresh as a little girl on her way to school. In another exhibit we saw bedroom curtains made of eyelet embroidered batiste, and on the dressIng table of the same room a pair of lamps topped by full white taffeta bonnets softly gathered about an inch from the top of the shade with a narrow blue ribbon. In still another store we noted a white embroidered batiste bedspread threaded at the edge of the bed just above the full-skirted drop, with narrow blue ribbon. It appeared to have been inspired by a little girl's petticoat. New Wallpapers

The most charming of the new

with an all-over design of single blossoms but with evenly spaced old-fashioned bouquets sometimes set on a plain ground with the pastel tints of dried flowers and sometimes on a pastel ground sprinkled with tiny dots. Others, that perhaps will be less popular but are almost equally jovely, are patterned with broad vertical stripes of candy-pink and white or mignonette blue and white yr daffodil yellow and white.

Cotton Takes All

Honors for Evening

Cottons run off with important honors in summer evening fabrics. Dancing frocks of dimities, piques, ginghams, organdies, dotted Swiss are styled with the same fine attention to line and detail that might be lavished on more precious fabrics. Red plaid gingham is used to

perfect for that important dance at It has a fitted, delightfully figurerevealing bodice, a wide, waltzing skirt and saucy short peplum. The

frosty white pique bandings; a nar-

row, streamered ribbon belt calls at-

SN

Reveliers Book Holiday Morning Plunge at Club

A breakfast swim the morning of the Fourth and a dance tonight are two Riviera Club activities planned for the week-end. The Reveliers, young set at the club, will give a breakfast swim at 6:45 a. m. Tuesday. Breakfast will be served at 8 o'clock and dancing will begin at 9. Paul Bruner, Earl Williamson and Miss Mary Polk are in charge. A shuffleboard contest will be an-

nounced tonight at the weekly Boster dance in the club ballroom. Booster members in charge of the contest are Dr. L. D. Bibler, William Dixon, C. J. Hale and Paul Whipple. Dancing will begin at 9:15 p. m. with Johnson and Snyder's Orchestra playing. Dr. Bibler was in

Chicken Salad Forms Center Of Party Menu

Recipes Given for Those Who Plan to Entertain Midsummer Brides.

.By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX Here comes the midsummer bride. Give the little girl a rousing reception. If it's an afternoon affair, try this menu: Breast of chicken salad on fresh pineapple slices, garnished with whole berries, stuffed celery, potato chips, assorted tea sandwiches, birdal cake, coffee, assorted nuts, candied rose petals, cream wafers. Breast of Chicken Salad (Serves 6) Three cups cubed cooked breast of chicken, 2 cups diced celery, mayonnaise, salt, pepper. Mix together and season well. Cut fresh pineapple into six slices each 1-4 inch thick. Peel, then cut slices in two to remove core. Put halves together again and sprinkle with a little powdered sugar. Stand on ice for one hour. Arrange six lettuce cups on a large silver platter. Place a slice of fresh pineapple in each nest and sprinkle with French dressing. Pile the chicken salad in the center of each pineapple slice. Garnish the top of each salad with whole fresh raspberries or strawberries and 2 or 3 sprigs of fresh watercress.

Open Lobster Sandwiches

Cut bread in circles and butter lightly. Spread generously with lobster salad mixture. Decorate center with small leaf of watercress.

Open Chopped Egg and Caviar Sandwiches

Butter rounds of bread lightly. Spread with chopped hard-cooked eggs well seasoned and mixed with mayonnaise. Garnish with caviar around edge and in center.

White Piquet Gives Tan Skins Emphasis

Slim little jackets of white embroidered pique with matching accessories, starched to a cool crispness, are quite flattering to tanned skins, and ultra smart over dark town frocks. You might select a short, fitted jacket blouse of eyelet pique, matching short, cuffed gloves, slipcover underarm purse, and clever little streamered hat made entirely of pique flower petals to wear tilted well forward toward the right eye. When you go to the beach, for boardwalk strolling, add an enchanting matching parasol to this

The answer fo your fo

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starts, cooks your entire

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charge of dance arrangements.

If you have ever dare

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saving, food it...Owna completely

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saving feature known

accessory ensemble.

Today's Pattern

8499 In a season when color is so ime portant, choose a charming and unusual way, such as Pattern 8499, to prove that two colors are better than one.

The bodice of this design is

trimmed with bands. of material brightened by double rows of bias binding. There's nothing smarter this sume mer than a flash of bright red here and there. Linen, gingham, percale and sharkskin are nice fabrics for this dress. It has, by the way, a lovely slim line with gored skirt, gathered bodice and broad-shouldered sleeves. Pattern 8499 is designed for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 40 and 42. Size 14 requires 4 yards of 35-inch ma= terial with or without nap; 43% yards bias binding (two colors). The new summer Pattern Book, 32 pages of attractive designs for every size and every occasion, is ready now. Photographs show dresses made from these patterns being worn, a feature you will enjoy. '' To obtain a pattern and step-by-step sewing instructions inclose 13 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indian=

apolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St,

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