Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1940 — Page 7
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 11, 1940
A
eee. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Nature Study Club to Visit
PAGE 7
Pencil Silhouette Rules at Block's Show
By ROSEMARY REDDING
Four Designers
B. P. W. Group Plans
Open House Mrs. C. R. Barnard will be hostess
~ Homemaking—
Honored for
HIS Majesty's Navy and mer-
A New Hair-Do for College; Dayton, O. A Boiled Rice Dish and Washing
Three Dam Sites
ULTRA CHIC is this new “cap” coiffure which 1s being recommended especially for college. The hair is cut quite short, the crown left smooth and straight, with the ends all the way around finished in little ringlets. It dramatizes the natural contours of the head in back and emphasizes waves above and slightly over the forehead and a clean
| will make an all day trip to Dayton
The Nature Study Club of Indiana |the German blockade.
chant marine will influence what Indianapolis women will wear this fall and winter. There is a little tweed suit over at Block's which, if it could talk,
Itinerary Includes would have a tale to tell of Eng-
ish seamen. For this creation of British wool came over on a ship which successfully passed through A shipment from the same firm aboard another
’
{Oct. 14 to the Broad Ripplc Busi [ness and Professional Women's Ase sociation.
Their Work At a recent meeting at the home
DALLAS, Tex., Sept. 11 (U. P).—|¢ nrg Fletcher King, 6416 BroadFour internationally famous design-|.. the association voted to hold ers were honored in this Southwest- | oan house at the stores, shops and ern style capital this week “for dis-
. . . } fel offices of members some time in RB L \ tinguished service in the eld of October.
fashion. | Committee chairmen appointed for
profile line { 7" = This is a simple hair-do to wash | and set at home and to manage be-| tween visits to the hair-dresser. The curled ends are attractive whether they stay in orderly ringlets or simple, brushed out curls.
Dislike School?
IT SOMETIMES happens that a| child who liked the first year or two| of school develops a real dislike for | it in his third or fourth year. Check | up on whether anything has hap-| pened at home to shake the child’s| confidence in himself, so that he feels his accomplishments are not as good as those of others his age.
If there 1s nothing wrong in his | home life, consult with the teacher. | It is quite probable that some trivial | incident in the classroom or on the] i playground has made the youngster 3 feel inferior to his classmates. With | the teacher's co-operation this sit- | i uation generally can be quickly cor- | ;
ship went down when that ship was
0, Sept. 29 to visit three of the five torpedoed. You can see the suit dams built co-operatively after the {his afternoon at the annual fall flood of 1913 to protect the Miami [fashion show in the auditorium. Valley from the recurrence of such, Tom > Just one ot oe little : ings, stemming from e war, 5 a {which are affecting fall fashions in ps will be made at the three| pmerica. Miss Frances Hawkes, dams which protect Dayton and the who came this week to Block's 2s cities below, according to an article the new fashion director, can give in the Hoosier Outdoors, monthly|&8n almost endless list. She was in-
lleti ; Sis bs _ | troduced to a select group of Include the Englewood dam on the dianapolis women yesterday at a Stillwater River, which with the | SPecial fall showing in the Terrace Miami and Mad Rivers join in the ROOM. city of Dayton to form the Great ’ 2 Miami River. On the Miami River,] THE OBVIOUS effect of the war, the group expects to visit the Tay-|of course, is that fashion prolorsville dam and on the Mad, the|nouncements are coming straight Huffman dam. |from New York. Paris is tempoAt the Taylorsville spot members | rarily in eclipse as the hub of the may inspect the fossil bearing rocks| fashion world. As a result this in the bed of a small stream near-|season’s clothes are more functional, by. Luncheon will be at the Taylors-|said Miss Hawkes. That in the ville stop. On the road which crosses trade lingo means that they are the Huffman dam, the party will see more wearable, more adapted to the Wright Field. On the return trip| American woman's likes and needs. the members may visit the Gaar This she attributes to “American-
rected
Mind Your Manners
[the racks can serve as shelves for Pioneer Museum and village in created for American women.” {the storing of various household Rumen : . For example, the Paris designers articles. The cabinet is finished in eservations for the trip should why could manage to carry on in
WHEN YOU TAKE out a package baked white enamel. Je ee Mis Ba Huse of cigarets at a friend's house and| Speaking of washing: There is a : g. es Wu : ee te} : o meet before the H. P. Wasson & Co. lay them on the table, it is quite |thoroughly domestic touch in the circle store entrance at 6:45 a. m correct for you to pick them up and Antarctic expedition headed by | fo. the trip a he take them with you when you leave. Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd. The :
: = | Tomorrow, members plan to meet |adventurers have household "7ashers ,¢ the north end of the bridge at and ironers in their two
Pas? Central Ave. and Fall Creek at camps.
RICE IS ONE of the low-cost grain 7.45 p. m. Jor a moonlight walk. The trek will end at the home of
foods which are good body fuel. The Question Box Dr. ‘and Mrs. ‘Walter BP. Morton,
Brown rice is particularly valuabie | Ik Dr. Mor oy for minerals and vitamins also. This| Q—What can be used to clean | VOere r orton will speak on rubber goods? e y
recipe will please all the family. Sunday the club will
BOILED RICE—SOUTHERN A—Water and mild soap are usu-|studio of Frederick Polley. STYLE ally sufficient. Gasoline swells and (4 to 6 servings) deteriorates rubber on prolonged One cup washed rice, 1 teaspoon contact, but there is no objection to a quarts honing wale || wiping the surface of a rubber arAdd rice to rapidly boiling salted |;; ; 1 : water and cook : wi bot for 20 ticle With YW clos moiseney in 845971 Frederick W. Hunt, local official to 30 minutes until tender. Drain line or carbon tetrachloride to re- of the Western Lawn Tennis Assorinse with boiline water and fluff Move an obstinate stain, provided it ciation, was in New York City last dry in moderate oven or over hot!iS done quickly, and the solvent is ‘week-end to attend the National water. This rice mav be cooked in| &llowed to evaporate at once. Tennis Tournament at Forest Hills,
a rice ball, instead of loose Mrs. Basil Peters of Natal Maritzburg, South Africa, is visiting
dangerous for human beings? ts. M dM : : : 1er parents, Mr. and Mes. Everett ——— er y - | ” | A—There is no physiological foun Massey, 730 N. Tremont St.
| dation for the belief that the vari
; : i .| Miss Helen Louise i i inTHREE APPLES, sliced thin, TT sonst Tuenis ho nerd Toous| wructor at the en cup brown sugar, % teaspoon nut-|Cannot be digested satisfaciorily\cervatory of Music, has returned| meg, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 2 table- | When eaten together at one meal |fuom 5 ‘month's vacation in Whits| spoons butter, 1 cup raisins, 21» cups Food that is fresh, properly pre-|pjains N. Y.. and Chicago and re- | hot water, 4 teaspoon salt, % cup/Pared and properly eaten may be sumes her classes this week. brown sugar. '% cup granulated taken in any combination by the | tapioca. si average person Dr. and Mrs. F. Z. Fults and fam- | Put the apples and raisins in al,, .i'l : " ily, 6261 N. Pennsylvania St. have | deep, buttered baking dish. Add the America's Children Syvtieg after a month's visit with | 1, cup brown sugar, the spices and | > (Mrs. Fults’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. | the Tt Cook the ee in a NEARLY TWO-THIRDS of the william Birk of Bay View, Mich. | double boiler with the salt, water children in cities are in families] and % cup of brown sugar pour over the apples. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degree F.) for 30 minutes or until apples are soft
Today's Recipe
visit the
Personals
Q—What food combinations are |
Today's Dessert
APPLE TAPIOCA (Serves 4 to 6)
nance standard of living.” At Mrs. Thomas J. Denney of Chicago least two-thirds of the nation’s chil-|are visiting for a week with Mrs. dren are in need of dental care. . . . Victoria Rentsch, 9200 N. Michigan Serve hot with cream or hard sauce. = crv Year there are nearly a quar-| Road Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Abbett, 6393
|ter of a million newborn babies who | : r, . ido not receive medical attention at | This Business of Washing birth or during the first few days of | Washington Blvd., have as their A VERSATILE NEW piece of!life guests Capt. and Mrs. George Allenhousehold equipment consists of a| These facts and many more are|der of Miami, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. utility storage cabinet, clothes drier set forth in “America’s Children” a Clarence Hornberger, 951 Campbell and bathroom heater all in one. A|pamphlet issued recently by the AVE. entertained at a dinner reheating element and motor driven! Public Affairs Committee, Inc., New Cently for Capt. and Mrs. Allender fan inclosed in the bottom of the York (10 cefits). Recommendations 8nd Mr. and Mrs. Sam Brundage, cabinet make it either a bathroom of the White House Conference .n |250 of Miami, Fla. heater or a drier for articles placed Children in Democracy held in |
on racks inside the closet. When it| Washington earlier this year are in-| Republicans to Hear is not used as a drier or heater, cluded ~ : BI II Wy ‘Mrs. Sn od grass 0 ei 7 5 0077 I !
| Mrs. Eleanor Barker Snodgrass, Republican state vice chairman. will 7; | speak at the regular meeting of the 7, | Marion County Council of Repub7 |lican Women at 2 p. m. tomorrow
From a Woman's | "S500 come Point oi View
{
hostesses, will be assisted by Mesdames Bess Carmichael, Cora Flack, Joseph Hillman, Dewev Hoss, Irma Hill, Hazel Patterson, G. K. Kleder, George Arnold, Emily Engle, Clarence Martin, Aileen Kidd, Essie Perry, Schuyler Mowrer, Ellen Buchanan, Lillian Johnson, Helen Heit, Josephine Loehr and C. S. Gibbs.
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Beta Sigma Phi Unit Begins New Season
Omega Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi | Sorority will hold its first fall meet- | ing tonight at 8 o'clock at the Antlers Hotel. Miss Dorine Lockhart is in charge of the program. Mrs. John Bayne was chairman for the sorority’s annual card party| oiven last night. She was assisted | by Mrs. George T. Fowler and Miss! Theima Valentine. | Other chapter officers are Miss] Mary Louise Mann, educational di- | rector, and Miss Evelyn Christopher, | social director.
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At a time well within memory, few women were acquainted with a bank except through an estate settlement. Today. a sizable group of a bank’s customers are women.
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Card Party Tomorrow The Ladies’ Auxiliary to the General Protestant Orphans’ Home will} give their monthly card party at thei home, 1404 S. State St., tomorrow | evening at 8 o'clock
Card Party Booked
The St. Mary's Social Club will | hold a card party at 2:30 p. m. to-| morrow in the school hall at 317 N.| New Jersey St. Mrs. Fred PFries| is chairman for the event which is| open to the public
F. HE. M. Club to Meet
Miss Helen Pardue, 902 N. Bancroft St., will entertain members of the F. E. M. Club at the regular business meeting at 7:30 p. m. tonight.
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The change in the economic status of women during the past quarter century is reflected in the many loans and other banking transactions arranged by women executives. Housewives as well as business women maintain their own
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checking accounts and safe deposit hoxes, and in fact, use every type of commercial banking and trust service.
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Significantly, many women who would neither
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ask nor welcome special chivalry appreciate straightforward courtesy whether they approach a bank to complete a specific transaction or to discuss a financial problem. American National's large clientele among women is evidence of the probability that you, too, would enjoy the specialized facilities of a banking relationship here. You are cordially invited to talk with one of our officers.
You may find that our Branch Office at College Avenue and, Forty-Second Street is especially convenient for you.
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
at Indianapolis
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Luncheon Is Today
Golden Rule Lodge 25 was to sponsor a covered-dish luncheon today in Trainmen's Hall.
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PEXNSYLVANIA AND MARKET
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I I Ss HRY AON ANG eposit Insurance Corporalionzzz
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and whose income is below the “mainte-| Mrs. Elizabeth Glunz and Mr. and | buttons and a pixie cap of the
part, featured the hobble skirt. | American designers conscious of | the active women in this cguntry knew they never could get around in such an extreme skirt. Instead, | they featured the “pencil silhoujette” with plenty of interruptions | to relieve the line but leaving plenty jof freedom for walking. The public has heard so much of (the success of the American de- | signers, that one is almost led to {believe that the talent over here | was latent. Miss Hawkes points out that there was plenty of fumbling on the part of the newer American designers. The public just did not, hear of it as the unsuccessful creations were not bought and put on the market. She should know as
This cinnamon brown coat with its classic lines was among the creations shown yesterday at Block's special style show. About the neckline is a gold necklace to which is attached black fox pompons to form the collar. A huge pompon of the black fox is perched atop the black turban.
Before a store-filling audience, |
including some of the nation’s best |
dressed women, Mme. Elsa Schiaparelli, Mrs. Edna Woolman Chase, Mme. Lilly Dache and Sulvan Stroock were announced as winners of the third annual fashion | awards given by the Neiman-Marcus Company. | All except Mrs. Chase were pres- | ent to receive silver plaques. Mrs. Chase, editor of the three Vogue magazines, was detained in New | York and was represented by Miss| Elizabeth Penrose, editor. of British| Vogue. Madame Schiaparelli, on tour of] the United States for the first time, | is the famoys French couturier, | Madame Dache is noted for her hats. Mr. Stroock, head of a weav- | ing business, was recognized for his | experiments in new fabrics. . 1 The four award recipients, among the top creators in a two-hillion-dollar industry, were introduced with a group of individual fashions representative of the qualities for which they were honored. Stressing the growing importance of this country as a source for de-| sign inspiration, to replace Paris, | H. Stanley Marcus said the NeimanMarcus awards were to honor American creations. Four new colors, developed in the] Southwest and based on the story of Coronado’s search for the seven golden cities of Cibola, were shown | for the first time in the near-mil-lion-dollar exposition of feminine attire. They were Coronado gold, for the metal he sought but did not find, Coronado red, for the red in the Spanish explorer's banners; | parrot green, for the birds he carried with him, and turquoise blue,
for the stones given him by New
the open house include Mrs. C. R. Barnard, entertainment; Dr. Ger= trude Hinshaw, publicity, Mrs. Jerry Beldon, prizes, and Mrs. Freda
Merrill, location
Popular Lectures
Downtown, Convenient
Recent Trends in Social Science Develcpments in labor, social thought, politics, criminology and economics
The World Situation Vital current problems discussed authoritatively
How to Make Rational Decisions Types of decisions and how to arrive at them.
Social Anthropology nteresting glimpses into human origins and institutions.
Interior Decoration Intended for home buyers and salespeople
makers
Modern P©svehiatric Non-technical explanation of modern psvechiatrie theories and approaches.
Approaches
Courses range from 8 to 12 lectures in length and $2 to $5 in price
114 Classes Begin September 16
Arts and Sciences, Business, Teacher Training, Pre-Medi-cal, Pre-Dental, Pre-Nursing, Pre-Engineering for Purdue.
Indiana University
Extension Division 122 E. Michigan St Riley 229%
Mexico Indians
she comes here from Franklin Simon’s in New York and was on the | fy.
| - : . +» » Another suit of bright black dress. Black velvet half spot” when the Americans
t00K | oq was topped by a hip length|Mmoons at the waistline allowed full-
over in New York. . ness in the skirt and bodice. With Su cape of red, white and black plaid. |; che hag a large black velvet off-
THE LITTLE SUIT with the tale | With it was worn a large black hat |the-face hat with a mantilla lace + a ’ ay 7 bia . . : o tell was of blue and gray tweed with fringed brim. A choice veil. An amethyst pin gave “that with a rust stripe forming the plaid. | dinner suit of winter rose wool had | elegant accent.” It had the popular 32-inch jacket. | q jacket embroidered in sequins and | Just to make you more unhappy With it was worn a tailored Shirt | haillettes. fabout missing the show—they
with a rust tie matching the stripe” Miss Hawkes wore a pencil slim | served champagne punch. and a rust brimmed hat and rust — alligator ghillies. The keynote of
all the costumes Lodge Books Luncheon Dinner Is Tomorrow was simplicity , . . another Ameri- | The
Soci ¥ ¢ idelity riew 140, Woman's can note. But much of that sim-|_ Spiel Sih ol Metrveyital] THe Pidefity Review Jy Woman's plicity had an elegance. A pencil | Division 128, Grand International | Benefit Association, will have its slim black coat had a large elbow Auxiliary of the Brotherhood of quarterly birthday dinner at 6:30 length cape edged in black fox.|Locomotive Engineers, will meet to-|p. m. tomorrow at Castle Hall, 230 he same fur was used for a shako|!morrow noon for a covered-dish |E. Ohio St hat. . A cattail brown suit had [luncheon Mrs. Robert Abbott, |, : y . 4 | . S. £ ’ > Wt y f yg a jacket with a peplum of black 2609 N. Gale St., hostess, will be as- | De card party which will follow ‘at Persian lamb, black Persian lamb sisted by Mrs. J. A. Fulmer and |3 b- m. Mrs. Ella Morgan is chair-
same | Mrs. Lelia Parsley,
The public is invited to
S surely as the new Buick FIRreBALL¥ straight-eight engine sets the performance pace for the coming season, the graceful silhouette of the new Buick SpeciaL and CENTURY cuts the automotive style pattern for another half decade.
speedster straining at its leash,
The reason is not alone the grace elbows, for heads, more room
*Aceording to the Encychpaedia Britannica, a super meteor avhich travels avith a series of explosions like the shock avawves of a great projectile is called a *‘FirEpaLL.”’
Buick Special Sedanet, $1006 Jil:
Buick prices begin at
935
for the Business Coupe delivered at Flint, Mich.
* Transportation based on rai! rates, state and local taxes (if any), optional equipment and accessories — extra. Prices subJect to change without notice.
™
MONARCH MOTOR CO., INC. 1040 N. Meridian Street, Corner 11th Street Indianapolis, Indiana Howard Holt H. R. Swaynie
21-25 W. North St Eighth & Connor Sts. Greenfield, Ind. Noblesville, Ind.
Woods Motor Sales 1 E. Monroe St
Franklin, Ind. Shelbyville, Ind.
Buick SPECIAL 0-passenger 4-door Sedan, SVOS82 delivered at Flint, Mich. Whee
of its Buick-created lines, nor the appearance of solid substance in action that gives this honey the look of a
It is the practical quality of great room enclosed in sleek and flowing iines—more room for legs, for
Sandman Brothers
== "4 STEWART'S § FOR SCHOOL
Pens, Pencils, Note Books, Tablets, Paints, Crayons, Chalk, Dictionaries, Teachers’ Helps, Dennison Supplies.
QoL LAS 1S
BOOKS STATIONERY BRIRIEED
34th & Penn. St 42nd & College 5539 E, Wash, St.
shields and white sidewal,
silhouette the cars of seek to achieve.
time and tide, obviously ‘sn’t wait-
for ing for any man?
EXEMPLAR OF GENERAL
entrance and more r ing luggage—that makes this the
Why wait for that—when in Buick vou travel in a car that,
1? res. extra ho oom for carry-
the future will
this like
MOTORS VALUE
COMMUNITY MOTORS, INC.
37-57 West 38th Street
Indianapolis, Indiana
Martinsville Auto Co. 77-99 W. Morgan St. Martinsville, Ind.
WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK WILL BUILD THEM
Ie bones a. hia
